Mark Koernke discussed militia training operations at Michigan camps, including night vision courses and aviation support exercises. He emphasized ammunition reloading and component recycling as critical preparedness measures for anticipated conflict in 2024, detailing methods to salvage and repurpose spent brass, steel cases, and primers. Koernke highlighted Palmetto State Armory's new domestic primer and steel-case ammunition production as significant developments. He also covered diversified AR-15 upper receiver calibers (5.56, 7.62x39, 300 Blackout, 450 Bushmaster) as essential for sustained operations, and addressed a letter from 20 state attorneys general requesting federal action to restrict Lake City Army Ammunition Plant sales to civilians.
were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three cornered hat, speaking low to me, he said. We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the length 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 is a 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 the 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 shit. You trade it in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize family farms.
and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be beaten. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedom 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 eat God-given right, and pray to God, eat the torch of freedom burning bright.
As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each god-given 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, land of the free?
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, northeast, west, north. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on...
www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. LibertyTreeRadio.org. And we're on satellite. We'll see all our merchant radio operators, no matter where you're at, whatever body of water, digital or analog. We're a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. It is, oh yeah, it's Thursday and it's a medium Michigan day outside. Not too cold, not too warm. It's just winter.
Beautiful day though. Everything's out there moving around. We've been pretty busy inside and outside trying to get some of their tasks accomplished before the end of the day. It is the 11th of January. It is the 16th year of open, obvious and in your face, Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with the K2024 old earth calendar.
2024 Battle for the Republic, the Dance of Swords. And a bunch of announcements and then we're gonna go to a little music request here. Ed, if you could look up Slade Cleaves Below by Slade Cleaves. For everybody out there, there's a number of different postings on YouTube for that. Slade Cleaves Below. And let's see, militia training at Camp Emmerich.
Mr. Chalmers will be the OIC for night vision course and small unit night objective testing and certification. That's this weekend coming up. That's again, militia training at Camp Emmerich. Mr. Chalmers is the OIC for this particular, he's the straw box for this FTX. And that will be for the night vision course and small unit night objective testing and certification.
Also, the 208th detachment, Mission Militia at Large, will be the host unit and will be providing all assistance and training at Camp Wayland North, which is active for this weekend. However, I'm going to give a warning order. We now have enough cold weather. We're going to have snow. We want to do the systems test on the equipment we have been developing.
We do it full range, full season, testing whenever we can, obviously. We do better than the military does nowadays, they're pretty crappy. As it is, this is why we're gonna announce that in the next week, I'll know next week what the window is for closure. We're gonna have one week worth of Camp oil and north being closed down again for test and evaluation, which is gonna happen all through the week. So it may or may not have.
could give me a little heads up. What was the condition of the malfunction? What did it send to adjust technology accordingly? That's where again, we're many different points of the compass coming together here. Every once in a while stuff doesn't work right. So for everybody it is Monday. Did they okay, let me ask this maybe Ed's there maybe he's having trouble with that and did the intro go out? There's a question or for any of our listeners if we haven't.
Negative. Actually, did airspace, did airspace, and did airspace? No, no, no, no. Your intro went out. You got up, you started to get into a subject, and then you cut off. What would be next? No, Visitor from the Past already played. Well, I only heard the rock band. Yeah, because you tuned in late. But Visitor from the Past played. Then when you cut out, we played Sun's Liberty, and then we played Poker Face.
That was still learning what because we lost mark at the beginning I think you were talking about one of the camps in Michigan when we lost you Okay, again that may be why what happened happened because again Bad guys are not happy with the fact that everybody is just kind of ignoring their nonsense and just proceeding with The business at hand what needs to be accomplished. So okay. Well, let's do this
First of all, if we're going farther, you are listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com, LibertyTreeRadio.org. And we're going to keep an eye on, we have a little bit of weather that's moving in, but it ain't here yet. Typically, that's what determines quality of broadcast with regard to getting things out of the pit of Michigan. You know, Planet Krapu, 21st century, ha ha ha, you're from 21st century. Yeah, don't say too much about that.
We all know what that means, planet, crapoo, situation normal, all bungled up. So again, we have a couple of, let me start from the top to the bottom here. Militia Training and Camp Emmerich, Mr. Chalmers will be the OIC for night vision course and small unit night objective test. This is a qualification testing phase. Anybody who participates will get a certificate.
208 detachment in the Michigan militia at large will be the host unit over at the other train site. I think it's Emmerich, they're gonna be at Emmerich. And also at Camp Emerson, and I wanna make sure we get this clear, we need everybody to show up. We have total inventory appeared as expected, 64 cases of Sopaco 16 count, 19 cases of humanitarian, this is the 10 count.
416 cases of regular military MREs and 109 cases of lerps. That's at Camp Emerson. And what we need to do is make sure that we get the transport over there to pick up and we need to clear it up because we have literally a whole truck full, it looks like, coming in and it could be here early, trying to get ahead of other snow storms and fronts, whatever. That's what they were told.
So if we can, this weekend we need everybody starting as of today. You can get over there right now. There's people on the site training. The quartermaster will be there and this stuff is of course in building two or building three. I can't read that very well but it looks like building two. So all you have to do is come in with your bill and they'll pick what it is you were supposed to carry out. Again, all of the first order came in but there is a massive
second wave MRE order that is coming in by truck that will be here by probably Tuesday. So we need everybody to jump on, jump in the truck, bring the trailer. Let's get everything out of there that we can ASAP. And also Camp Emerson has an aviation support FTX coming up here. Actually starting this weekend, they're bringing in a couple of small birds, but they're also going to be promoting
the mission militia aviation support section, a new training location. It's not part of the regular camps and they will be providing use of this facility which has training aids for small helicopter, mid-sized support aircraft, helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft for the purpose of practicing mounting, dismounting, and cargo loading.
And they've already got everything set up. They've been using it themselves. Since we had this meeting that took place last weekend, it was asked what more could be done. This gives everybody or gets everybody that can get over there up to speed before the war kicks off. Remember, we're going to war in 24. The bad guys have it planned. We just need to be ahead of the curve. So for everybody out there, this weekend, if you're going to be at Camp Emerson,
You can talk to the guys. They're going to have a training site set up. Obviously, it's going to be one of the fields because they're landing a couple of the small birds there. And they'll also be providing other instruction information on aircraft availability, material and equipment that's available to sale that they've tracked down. The idea is that we pick up everything that we can, including the support technology.
Another benefit, you're going to Camp Emerson this weekend. I know that the third regimental combat team colonial marine militia has got visitors up from the south. Those people are in this state. And the third RCT is going to be working with the 18th and 18th regimental combat team colonial marines and also an element of the 29th brigade, no 29th detachment.
Michigan militia at large. There we go. Now I can see it. That makes sense. 29th is a pretty big unit by the way, but the combat detachment that's going to be there will be participating and also will be participating in the night vision activity going on over at Emmerich. I think at the same time, both in Emmerich and Emmerich. Yeah, it looks like both. So.
Anyway, other things going on. First of all, let's do this. And if you could queue up below by Slade Cleaves. I know we had some music in there already, guys. Cool piece. Slade does ballad, balladier music. Classic Americana. And if you get a chance, check out his music over on YouTube.
Down that road alone, a member of the town once called home I grew up in the valley, every neighbor a friend Until the modern world started creeping in with a cash in hand In the valley, there's a painted red line marked in a crime Island reminder, all inside it must go We lost to the rising, dead rivers flow
Some folks took the money, watched our town, photographed the face, take it all, were down the church, it was a progress turn, got a duchy store, as long as you could, for the flood, dark of night, face on the wall, shake off the memories, thanks for the grace, the porch lights glow, the dust keeps... Before the weekend,
I understand you guys have some meetings out there in Kansas and Iowa this weekend, pro-patriot slash working towards the same tasks that we have happening here in Michigan with regard to the new militia declarations. So you girls and guys keep the work up there. We appreciate what you're doing. And there's a lot of people up to speed real quick. All of them are getting on the bandwagon and doing their part. So we appreciate that. God bless you all.
A couple of the things here that are on the list, oh things to do. Let's make sure we get the rest of that done and out of the way. Oh, let's also do this while we're at it before we forget. Latest guns and gadgets. And then some really good news, actually. It looks like everything as we expect is going with Palmetto State Armory, but the latest guns and gadgets.
And don't forget you can go over to Guns N Gadgets. We're at the bottom of the hour. It's 5.30 right now. 5.30 pm Eastern Standard Time. And you can go to Guns N Gadgets, give a thumbs up, and share every video that you see there right now. We need to do this. We need to share. Guns N Gadgets is a useful tool. They said that's a turn-and-roll. They wouldn't act all by themselves without the consent of the governor, who's their boss. Would they?
Well, shockingly, the answer is yes, they will. And thanks to one of my viewers, I'm going to show you what happens when you reach out to your elected officials after learning of some gun control that your state backs. And in this instance, the governor knew nothing about it. And the Attorney General acted on behalf of the entire state all on their own.
It's crazy, and this is one of the reasons I try to get everybody to get involved and make phone calls and emails and write letters because you can catch these people acting on their own agendas.
Yeah. Guys, yes, real quick. If you're curious about purchasing gold or silver, check out Lear Capital. Lear is standing by to answer all of your questions related to buying physical gold and silver that they will discreetly ship directly to your door. You can go right to their website. It's leergg.com and see the current spot price of gold or silver as well as what they have available for coins and bars. So don't wait, do what I did, call and ask all the questions to help you decide what's right for you and your family.
Lear helped me purchase my gold and my silver and they continue to and they answer all of my questions all the time. There's no obligation to purchase at any time, but just give them a call. They'll answer all your questions. 1-800-260-5075 or again head over to leergg.com and I want to thank them for being supporters of the channel. Guys, if you want to stay in the know on this channel, then subscribe down below Guns and Gats, it brings you to 2nd Amendment News every single day. Let's get into this letter.
That was received by a viewer. Thank you. I'm blocking your name, so obviously I'm protecting your information. But this is an interesting letter. This letter was sent from the Office of the Governor of Nevada.
says, uh, thank you for taking time to contact Governor Lombardo's office. Your correspondence is important to him and allows him to better serve the citizens of Nevada. Now this is obviously coming from an aide. The New York Attorney General wrote a letter to the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention which requested that the White House investigate military-grade rounds that are sold to civilians. And of course, uh, talking about the video I put out yesterday, I'll put it up above if you haven't seen that. You need to watch that.
Let's continue. Several other attorney generals signed the letter in solidarity, including Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford. The office of the governor was not consulted or involved in the signing of this letter and is unable to endorse its contents. If you have any concerns about the letter, please direct those concerns to the office of the Attorney General Aaron Ford. And it gives their information. So if you live in
Nevada, here's the information to reach out to your attorney general. And this was sent by the Constituent Services Team in the governor's office. Now, right away, people should be saying, aha! If you weren't aware of how these attorney generals, especially these rogue attorney generals, let's use some of their own words, right? These rogue attorney generals who are hell-bent on destroying America, destroy the only right that preserves the rest.
so that we can get our way across the board. So we have an attorney general, and believe me when I tell you it's not only one, this attorney general caught not consulting with the governor's office and saying the office, or my office says that the state of Nevada doesn't want 2-2-3-5-5-6 ammunition because it's military grade.
I bet if you all reached out to your offices, your governor's offices or your office for the Attorney General, you might find some shenanigans too. And when we find these shenanigans, like we just found out in Nevada, exploit it and flood the office of the governor with anger and ire about their not knowing what their Attorney General is doing in trying to ruin your constitutional rights. That's how you make some people shudder. That's how you force
governor's actions. That's how a lot of our states have gotten constitutional carry in the last couple years is by we the people forcing their hand. I hope this reinvigorates your fire to get a hold of these elected representatives and take action and take control. You are in power. You're their boss. We the people. Guys and gals, never ever forget it. I appreciate y'all. Hope you will take action on this.
Share this I was gonna say shred this share and spread this so that more people realize What what happened when one person reached out and now there's a Weakness in the armor in Nevada and I hope that Nevadans exploit it Be safe stay vigilant carry a gun to keep you your friends your family your community safe I'll see you on the next one. Take care gadgets. That's the latest guns and gadgets
Not a surprise, of course we know that the lesbian purple-haired queers the $3 bill of pedo attorney general here in Michigan, the one with the dead eyes, everybody goes, have you ever seen that person? America, he's up there with the blah, blah, blah. Yeah, I won't say any more. There are people that have seen these turds close up and said, I just look like they're dead like, like, like, like, horses, like sharks. And it's like, yes, that's exactly there. They're long gone.
There isn't anything there with any brains. It's all, you know, again, going through the motions, corpses, walking along, animated by, you know, Nesferatu slash, you know, Cthulhu slash take your pick, whichever of the dark, articultic type, you know, creatures that they worship. Yes, the the faggot slash piece of trash, you know, queer that we have in Michigan as the Attorney General is an absolute flush POS.
But we wouldn't have it any other way. I mean, I don't really want them half arsed. I'd rather have them full arsed. I want every, everybody needs to feel exactly what they are. And so when you get a chance to meet these creatures firsthand, oh dudes, everybody comes back with, my God, you were right. And it's like, yes, yes, I know. This is why our coalition has gotten stronger here in Michigan.
Day by day, everybody's understanding we're going to war in 24 doesn't make any difference what they do now It's as far as that goes. There's nothing they can do to backtrack The only thing they're gonna do is become more frothing at the mouth crazy And that's what we need everyone to see
That's preferred. Michigan State Police absolute prostitutes on this game. Those whores are gonna do whatever they're told to do to rape, kill, pillage, and burn Michiganders. If you aren't ready for that, you don't understand exactly what the politics are of the the satanic crew. And if you're with Blue Lodge, you're well one of them fellow traveler buddies that thinks the UN is Wunderbar and globalism is Wundertastic.
They're told in their own training that you have no rights. That's Michigan State Police. That's what they do to pump into their little pea brains when they're in the academy. You have no rights. That the globalist agenda is the where they want to be and where they want to go and what they want to goose step to and we understand that. So again, just make sure everybody else understands it too.
Pass the word as they say and it's Thunderbird like it is. Thunderbird, why Thunderbird? What's the word? Thunderbird. Oh, now next good news. Palmetto State Armory. I asked him, I already saw another piece on it. Other people who made contact with him. Palmetto State Armory apparently is making their own primers.
There's a couple other videos out there you can find on the subject guys. This is fantastic news They are going into full production and as many components. I do not know about the powder I just wanted to find out about the primers and again some stuff. They're not divulging yet, but Propellant would be one thing they can there's still other sources, but primers are a critical issue
And they are producing in country, fully US manufactured, Palmetto State Army manufactured. They have another company that they're associated with that's their sister company, usually the case with different arms of production. And what's interesting is that they will be doing boxer primers, I believe in regular slash, well, what, small rifle primers, probably.
The interesting thing about this is that the new steel case ammunition that is going to be out very soon with Palmetto State Armory is boxer primed steel case. Now this means that no matter what, yes, it is reloadable. This is fully reloadable ammunition. My hope is the moment that we know for sure
that they are finally out there on the market. We need to go out and clear the shelves out to make sure that they have an excuse to do double production, quadruple production. We need for them to be able to expand as quickly as possible.
And the way to do that is to pull the product off the shelf and put it on your shelf where it belongs. So this is going to be a high priority and I will keep you up to speed. There's other people that are doing a great job of passing on the information. They've been, again, giving regular updates. But Palmetto is pretty proud of this too because this is a significant step forward.
manufacturing operations and it's 100% keeping in America. They don't really want anything from outside, they may be still buying, for instance, material components. Because America has been so hockey puck with the traders in Washington having destroyed through NAFTA and GATT and using the EPA as a tool to attack the companies.
that many of the grandfather companies that were producing good product for a generation and more, three, four generations and more, was put out of business. You know that we no longer have, as far as I know, the last black powder company we had in country is gone. That was, again, a bad situation. I don't know for sure about the end result on sale. I have to acknowledge that.
But that facility means that there's nothing producing what is the most utility-grade powder that is available that could be used. It doesn't mean we can't make black powder. We can build black powder. But factory standard, people have a tendency to obviously lean towards that. So for a lot of the people that were using either black powder weapons or
Again, reloading in different ways with certain cartridges. You're looking to an outside source. That's not accidental. The farther they can put everything away from the American people, their logic is when the enemy acts against the American people that they can disarm everyone that much quicker. So again, we understand the game. We know the game plan. We've talked about it forever ad nauseam on the air. So there's none of you here that should be surprised.
Other people are like, they wouldn't do that. Well, pull your head out of your fundamental orifice. That's not the case. Yes, they can do that. Yes, they will do that. And only a fool in the ordinary competent would blurt out that they won't do that. That's stupid. I didn't expect a sort of a Spanish Inquisition. I guess, you know. So anyway, that's really where we are. The interesting thing is, but guys, this is good news. Palmetto is stepping up to the plate.
Now, does that put them in the crosshairs? I believe it does. I believe that Paul Meadow also understands that somebody has to cough, find their balls, and step up to the plate. I'm telling you, everybody is in the same boat. We're all tired of the panty waste doing the defecate your spine out, your bunk hole like a meat xylophone, and then lamenting and gnashing them teeth, piss on that garbage. Throw that out the window.
They're doing a good job. They're stepping up and doing what needs to be done at this point in time this juncture whatever you want to call it and So let's give them all the support that we can when the time comes and we give everybody a heads up We can be in motion the moment the rubber meets the road But the cool thing is again. This is going to be boxer primed
Now, I'm going to comment on the rest of this in a second, but Boxer Prime Steel Case reloaded all day. And since, again, remember, this is kind of a bi-metal, it's not, there are many, many, many different grades of steel. And the grade of steel that they're using is malleable. It has to flex. And this is, of course, true with regard to initial forming, but understand this also means
that when it comes time to reload, you're gonna get more than a few reloads out of this steel case. It is a useful tool. And even if all you got was one, it changes the battlefield dynamic on American soil because as long as material can be recovered, it can be reprocessed and reused. And that needs to be a very, very, very high priority. Now, on that note,
And I know most people are going to be lazy as the day is long. I told you before, that's one biggest problem in our country, lazy ass bastards. It's true. People have been conditioned, they're wasteful. Everybody always goes, well, now you know my grandma, there's people making comments about this right now.
Well, now you know why grandma used to flatten out the aluminum foil and used to save the plastic bags. People are going to find out about that real quick again. Yeah, in other words, the economy going in the toilet when they hit the switch. And just like back then, it wasn't accidental, it was planned. It was part of the weaponization of the economy against the population to try and bend the knee of the American people to the globalist agenda back then in 1929.
And it didn't work quite the way they had planned, but they did it anyway. Go ahead, jump in there. I'm sorry. Now I've got traffic situation. I'll be back in a minute. Okay. The big thing here again is I don't know what – I would assume – let's do it this way. First of all, Palmetto is an up-and-coming company, so they're going to be laser focused on a project.
They're producing boats, they're producing steel case, they're producing primers, do not know if they're producing propellant, would be great if they do invest in and go into propellant. Even if it's just one propellant, they don't have to make everything all at once. But what they need to do, and what would be optimal, is that they build what they need for the production line they have. Go ahead, I think we have our caller back. Yeah, just trying to avoid the cop of me, hitting me talking on the phone. Blocks are prime.
Can you take the damn prime cases and drill or do something to the bottom to make them box or prime? Or is that an assosable the way they're formed? No, it is possible, but the tools, there used to be four companies that made the re-priming pocket tool for drilling that particular fixture with all of the steel case ammunition.
Now, the only issue is this. You might have noticed, depending on what era the ammunition is, that the Russians also had a few different sized primers. When the first 7.62x54 R ammo was coming in, it was some of the very old inventory, both from China, and there was a little bit that came in from, I think it was Ukraine, as a matter of fact.
And the interesting thing about it was that it was the larger what we call the pan primer. There was a, it's a Berdan, it's a Berdan primer, but it's larger than anything else that was out there. Now that's way back in the taillights. We don't see any of that anymore. Most everything that you have is within basic spec, but it is, again, either Berdan or Boxer Prime.
When the stuff came in in a regular flow, basically it is in the same conventional diameter as our light rifle primers or our small rifle primers. And then there were some that was large rifle primer. I don't know what the Russian criteria for that was. They were running a slave trade back in the day, so they just ran whatever they had a lot of. And it depended on which plant, like the Tula Arsenal has been around forever.
and they, you know, cranked out a lot of interesting stuff.
But most of it is the same basic primer diameter. The big thing is it is burdened primed as opposed to boxer prime. What that means is there are two fireports, Venturi ports that are in the base and the primer itself is built differently. Now back in the 90s, we had four different companies. One of them down there on the ridge in Tennessee. There was another company out of Missouri and then there were a couple out of Utah slash out of the Mormon corridor.
of gun manufacturing. And what this tool is, is you hook it up to your drill press, you can hook it up even to a hand drill. And literally all you do is just push forward and it would do two things. It would ream to proper spec the primer diameter, and it would punch and cut the box or primer channel into the base of the case. Now these are steel case, and he goes, well, why should I save steel case for this very reason?
I would point out that everybody is lamenting about being shirted animal, but have you noticed everybody's pissy about the idea of accepting that you're gonna have to save everything? This is the lesson that people haven't learned yet, that every once in a while we have to relearn, because this latest batch of people are used to off-the-shelf buying, as far as even components. Reloading has always taken advantage of cheap, which means you shoot more, because you get it cheap.
Well, I'll tell you what, this is something I am dead cold serious if you're listening and you're out west. I would collect kitty litter, you know you got those big three gallon kitty litter large mouth containers. Nobody really wants them. Some people use them, I mean I do, I use them for all kinds of things. But what I really use them for is those and other big large plastic containers you can find is for inane materials that I'm not going to use right away.
This includes, for instance, steel case ammunition. While we're not at this moment in a big reprocessing operation, any steel case, if you shoot it, you should be recovering it immediately. Don't leave it laying on the ground. Don't leave it out there until next week. I'll come back and get it. No, no, no, no, no. Recover and sort all brass, period, in all steel case, in all aluminum case, all of the lawman ammo. Lawman ammo can be reloaded all day.
Done it for decades. I always laugh when somebody says that can't be reloaded. Can I have it? Then they always get well, there's that pregnant pause you ever notice this about people They'll tell you how it can't be done. But when you know something I don't know Yeah, they get that pregnant pause thing. I've laughed about it for years It's like but then they don't know what to do because they just told you that can't be done Well, cool. It's okay if I pick it all up, right and they'd like Wait, oh, okay
Yeah, and they actually answer like that. They respond like that, okay? So the fact is that it can all be reprocessed. It's just a matter of how motivated somebody is. Most people are lazy as the day is long. So I take advantage of that. I don't try to correct anybody's direction on any of this anymore. Period. I'm serious. Just don't tell them about it. You want that? No, it's gone. Oh, right. Now they may still do the pregnant pause thing.
It's kind of like when people put stuff out by the road, but then you're like oh, you're I don't want you to take that trash Okay, wait me. You're throwing it out. Yeah, you didn't want it. No, but all of a sudden if somebody else wants it Oh my god It's trash Think of every store. I don't know if you guys dumpster dive, but I mark and I have been known to do that occasionally
Think of every store that you've ever gone to where somebody comes out with a hard attitude, go there, you can't take that stuff. Why not? It's trash, isn't it? You've got to get out of here. I'm going to call the cops. It's trash. In fact, some stores are so spiteful that they will smash everything they put in the dumpster to make sure you can't come get it. Right. Because heaven forbid you should have it.
But and we have a problem with that. Okay, there's still useful things on anything unless they let somebody's really anal retentive and they want to sit there and you know, Play Hugo of Warsaw with a hammer all day and if they are they're wasting manpower that they have this should be used for running the store You know what I mean now, however again side point is that if you go to any of the ranges my recommendation is a
Pick up everything. And by the way, somebody's asking me about 22 today also because of what they heard with Palmetto. I don't know if Palmetto is going to do 22 ammo, but by God, if they did, they'd sell every round they made. Don't you think? But it's another process, and that's something that right now, remember, they're diamond cutting. They're diamond cutters. What they're doing is they're working into a market, and they're filling a perfect niche.
This is the best thinking thing that we could hear right now is that somebody has decided to make up a new production facility They're building an ammunition that every caliber that the chambering that everybody needs Yeah, all the out there one more another probably got an SKS or you know one or the other sitting on the shelf an SKS or an AK right now on while I'm talking and the biggest complaint is
Yeah, the biggest complaint is cost. You know, what is cost to get that, you know, that ammunition out there that I want? Well, this settles that very, very quickly. This takes care of that problem. And the wonderful thing about it is that this is going to do nothing but get better, provided we support them.
However, in the meantime, we are looking at conflict, a conflict resolution issue with regard to multiple tiers of supply. And I will remind you that we're going to war in 24. Closest to the supply and support needs is where the tactical small production needs to be now.
You need components to do this. Now let me point something out. There are two ways that with Boxer, with Berdan Prime you can do what's called a ream hook. There's a tool out there. I don't know who's still building them, but they were still out there circulating. There is a reaming hook that is designed to literally snag the primer and all you do is basically you're jerking it out of the primer pocket. Okay?
There's another technique utilizing the drill press again. We talked about, of course, making the Boxer Channel, but there are companies, at least there were, by the way, Russian companies that were bringing in Berdan primers. So you could actually read Berdan a cartridge, you know, if you had the primers, obviously. Well, guess what? Somebody did it.
So those are still out and about and I would remind somebody because there's somebody maybe listening goes, oh my god I bought those years ago. I forgot all about that. Why? Because everybody's been pampered with all the available materials. They did that intentionally. Guys, they cut all the ammunition off in the late 70s. And when I say cut off, I mean ammunition was choked dry. So everybody goes, this is all new. We've never seen anything like this. All BS.
We've seen this before but here's what happened. When all of a sudden we couldn't get it, well Americans that used to be instead of the, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the whoosie type we have now which are the way we did, or we didn't, instead it was, wow, what do we do? Well, I don't know, this is America, we make machinery. How about we figure out how to reload what we got? How about we figure out whatever we got on the shelf, especially if somebody else doesn't want it, that we actually reload it? Can we do that? Well, of course we could do that.
And so amazingly enough, here's what happened. Reloading. If you go look at the American riflemen, go take a look at all these production, you know, trade magazines. Go look at guns and ammo. All of a sudden, everybody wanted to reload in a vast, just the opposite of what they expected. Well, we're going to cut the ammo off and the American people are going to piss their pants and throw their hands up in the air and surrender because we're going to cut the ammo off. What happened is everybody went out.
Found out more about reloading and went out and started reloading seriously to the point where our production capacity in home reloading was equal to Anything that the factories were doing so contrary to the usual formula of secret weapons for silent wars Which is to find you know to find you through the cost of
right out of existence of anything that you want to do, we were doing just the reverse. We virtually had created an entire pocket manufacturing mechanism that was vast. And I'll tell you why, I'll give you an example is
As I've told you many times, I had a complete production operation set up between agents and allies. And we've sold hundreds of thousands, hundreds of thousands, if not close to a million rounds, in 9mm 38 Special, 357 and 45 ACP, built from reload, scratch, ammunition.
Because ball jacket was was expensive. We did double and triple wash lead copper coated. You know what it sold. You couldn't get enough fast enough. The cost per unit was half. In fact, less than half the price in the retail end. Which should give you a hint as to how cheap it was for us to produce the product.
We used existing industrial platers that were located in the Washtenaw County area. We had individuals that scavenged the lead, we harvested from the ranges, we bought all the lead from all of the gun shops that had indoor ranges at that time. And in doing so, we virtually built an entire production facility. We didn't even have Dylan presses, we only had conventional strong arm opresses that we were using.
And we could not make enough. Today with all the cheater presses you've got with your production presses of how many different styles, you know, think about it. There's the only reasons because somebody's gone into wussy brain mode and won't get up off their dead ass and do anything. Well, I don't know if I could do that. I know it's just scary. Oh my God. But we gotta get him over to old. We're gonna die because we can't get him. We make it. Oh, I feel great screaming. We're doomed.
The Woofies. The Woofies are our problem right now. So again, we need to step up to the plate. We need the components on standby and that means that all you guys are the ones that are going to be the solution on this by collecting. There are places out west, and as some of our listeners are out there in Arizona, there are range areas. First of all, Arizona, even when they do get some moisture, it becomes drier than a popcorn fart in about 15 minutes.
There are places out there where people can shoot where you could literally take rakes and you have inches of steel case and brass and shotgun shells laying there. Now we're gonna rate these things. Let me give you, would I throw out a rusted or a tired, I won't say totally, okay, it was really rusty, rusty, it goes in the scrap metal. You know, I've talked about this before. If it's rust, it's going in the scrap metal. That's the only thing the scrapper ever gets from me.
But if it's brass, or if it's steel, or if it's aluminum, now that's the only thing about the law, man, is it will disintegrate with enough exposure. But if you rake everything up, first thing you do is sort it by chambering type, steel case, brass case, okay, etc. And you itemize what you've got, but you can buy, you can pull tonnage. We're not talking pounds anymore. We're talking some of the places out there in Arizona,
that are public shooting yards, areas, literally it's carpeted. The area is carpeted with spent cases. Now, would I keep stuff that is, does have a little rust on it? Yep. You want to know why? Because I need pyrotechnic caps for demolitions, anti-personnel mines, and down the road IEDs. What? Yeah, you can completely reactivate primers. Another thing I will point out is that when you save all this stuff, if you're not reaming the primer out,
But if you're using compression or pressure or a pin to drive a primer out, you need to save every stinking primer. You, again, get yourself some cheap containers that you can hold a lot of junk in. When you're doing pistol primers and you go, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk. When you're de-priming and you're, you know, reforming, take those spent primers and put them over in container number one, small pistol.
Because you're doing 9 millimeter. So you take all those those boxer primers that have been spent and you put them into that three gallon container that kitty litter container Which is also nice and dry because the kitty litter is dry you dump the kitty litter So whatever dust in there is going to help you to keep things dryer You know what you do end up with a whole inventory of pieces we can rebuild later on. The thing is true with the brass steel. We're gonna cover this a little more. We're gonna get, we're not stopping. We're gonna keep running and going here. We're gonna take it right down to the Republic.
So let's remind everything else about the Lord of the North. The Lord of the Liberty and the Son of the Holy. Move it back right here. It's the talk, it's the talk. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three cornered hat, speaking low to me. 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 length of the grave.
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 is 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 traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize family farms and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors.
so that 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 freedom 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 will 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, keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame.
And good.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the Intelligence Report, second hour. I'm Mark Carkey, one day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, east, south, northwest, and north. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on...
www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com LibertyTreeRadio.org and run satellite, once they hide all our merchant operators out there, no matter where you are, Anchorage, porting facilities, lakes, rivers, inland seas, the Great Lakes of Michigan, bigger than those inland seas, and of course the oceans, broadcasting both on digital and analog. Make sure you get that right.
We're also in a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. I want to say hi to all our rebroadcasters in Texas. We appreciate the work that you guys are doing with your micro-FM's. And God bless you all. We are thinking of you even as I speak. It's Thursday. It is the 11th of January. It is the 16th year of open, obvious, and in-your-face Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K.
2024, old earth calendar, 2024, battle for the Republic, the dance of swords, let the dance continue. We're gonna make sure that happens as a matter of fact. We were talking about reloading. So let me do a pecking order criteria for first of all, what are the forms of resource? How are we gonna use the resource we have? Number one is conventional reloading with direct application based upon
component design and availability. In other words, Boxer Prime, non-corrosive, we're gonna use a factory projectile. We can do Berdan. If you wanna do Berdan, there's still Berdan primers out there. There's companies that sell Berdan primers right now because the Russians aren't the only ones that make those. However, it is a more aggressive process and it's not as convenient as Boxer Prime, as you will know if you study reloading.
The next step though is component remanufacture to create a serviceable round with the materials that we collect. The alpha group is obvious brass case, heated needle, bullets are off the shelf, powder is available in the container, and that's still powder and propellant is still the consistent across any solution, no matter which of the subjects we're on. But phase two or grade two is not as pretty.
but can be reprocessed like burdened primed brass as I've told you can use the gouge reamer system you can use the drill re-bore system there's a number of different ideas all of them have been used all of them been perfected there's nothing you would be inventing that's new but it would be nice if everybody you know got to act together and got back in motion to use and utilize this vast inventory of material that's available
Now, inside the burdan slash steel case or aluminum case or shotgun shell category, there is, you know, serviceable, ready to go. Blamed but still serviceable. And then there's debris. Now, even stuff that's crushed, damaged or even mildly corroded
You save it, but you put it into that third category. Now there is, I guess, level four, which is, oh my god, it's got flakes of rust coming off it. It's partially rusted or corroded. Will I pick that up? Yeah, I want to clean up the area that I'm cleaning up where the brass and everything's sitting so that when I come in, I know that everything I pick up is going to be fresh and it's going to go into the alpha category. But rust stuff that's rusted, stuff that's damaged.
It's gonna go into my scrap metal or going into my fragmentation buckets. So when I load up that six-inch piece of PVC pipe with a black powder charge with a cap on the end of it, and I put it in underneath a couple of sandbags and I point it to, say, a door. When I touch it off, they're gonna get hit with parts of 45 ACP aluminum brass chunks of shrapnel.
scrap off of the smelted bullets that we smelted them down. You got hollow points that have opened up. They all go into that food gas shrapnel package. And when it opens up and goes out the end of that six-inch piece of PVC pipe and spreads out, whatever's in front of it gets folded, spindled, sheared, and mutilated. Oh, you think I'm wasting anything? First rule is we're total recyclers and reloading. So I have a bucket off to the side that says frag.
anything in nuts, bolts, chunks of old tired nails, pieces that are so bent they can't be fixed. Anything that's smaller, even if it's a piece of iron, it can be beat up. I don't break it up right away because I might need that piece of iron for something else, but like cast iron items, little door parts and hinges and stuff like that, if they're breakable, smack, smack, smack with a hammer, they go over in the frag bucket, already pre-fragged down to about quarter inch, maybe three-eighths of an inch size.
in diameter approximately, and I don't care about measuring it, I'm not wasting that much time on it. I'm just going to make frags so that when the time comes, I can put it into a bag charge, put that black powder charge down below with a squib, an electronic squib, couple pieces of wire coming out the front end of that pipe, and I'm going to load up my fragmentation. It's going to open up and spread out the moment it leaves the end of that muzzle. I'm using the sandbags to cover it because it's going to fall apart. It only can be a one-time use thing, but boom!
And then there's lots of, oh god, oh god, oh my face, oh my knees, oh he's wearing body armor. But every soft piece of tissue that was in front of that food gas round, oh my god.
All the pain, all the pain, oh God. And you're gonna finish them off then, right? No, I don't want to scream. They're shouting into the radio. They're screaming. All their buddies are hearing how horrible and terrible and painful it was for five of them to come through the front door and chunks and pieces of them to go back out the door. Boop. See how that works? The pain, oh the pain. That's what you want to hear. Don't want to kill them. I just want to hurt them so horribly. They wish to God they weren't born.
They might die later. But anyway, now on the prioritizing and pecking order. Tools, there are tools that can either be created and there are all kinds of designs out there or that are already off the shelf. For conventional reloading, when you do deep prime, for instance, as I pointed out, I want to re-qualify this. Every primer you pull from a boxer round, you save. Why? Because they can be rebuilt.
Here's the other thing, you can either go into the alpha project for being rebuilt or look at it this way, you got a three gallon container of little steel cylinders. And if you want to, you can experiment, take a 12 gauge shell like a three inch Magnum, use a cardboard standoff for your wad instead of a commercial cup, and then load the case up with those primers that you pulled out.
and load them into the shotgun shell and fold it over with a nice little cardboard cap on the top too so nothing rolls around. It shouldn't leak out the top because your Rosetta will keep it in place.
And try that indoor inside a house, you know, a house distance when you pull the trigger. You know what happens? Leaves the end of the muzzle, spreads out immediately, and once again, oh, oh, Bob, the secret policeman who was coming into confiscate guns, gets a, you know, leg full, chest full, groin full, arms full of horrible, horrible, terrible, horrible stuff. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, empty.
That was that five round, that five shot, Mossberg. You just dumped out before you switched out. The next guy coming up uses his five shot Mossberg. And you just walk them right back out the door in pieces. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, neck, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, neck, boom, boom, boom. Yeah, that works. Teamwork. Number one, number two, number three. Ready? Oh, the Hut Huts are coming down the hallway. On your mark, get set, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, down.
Next man up, 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, 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,
And that wad, the moment that leaves the tube, dudes, there's no cup to hold it together. It immediately starts to spread. That's how shotguns are supposed to work for close quarter operations. I'm not trying to blow doors off. I'm trying to blow somebody back out into the front porch or blow them out into the front yard and hopefully they'll be out there screaming and bleeding for a while. We're dying right in the hallway. I really don't care, do you? I know, I know. So anyway, everything can be reused, but we don't throw it out.
Okay, when you go to the range, pick up all the range boxes. Look at all the 30 caliber, 7.62x39 boxes, and you got little dividers and everything. If you're going to be reloading, why not reload it into factory boxes made available by somebody else for free because you just pick them up.
And you've got pistol boxes, you've got rifle boxes, you have shotgun shell boxes, you reload a lot. One of the guys, remember several years ago, we had the guy that his dad was a trap shooter. He filled up three dumpsters, not to throw them away. He used these 40 foot dumpsters to move the ammo that dad made.
He had the fire department down in Florida help him to load everything into these dumpsters. And so we brought the ammo back up from Florida. He had it shipped up on trucks, but he used walk-in dumpsters and he gave one full dumpster of 12 gauge ammunition to the fire department because he helped him load everything and his dad wanted to give the volunteer firemen a gift. The other two dumpsters solid and sealed.
Came back up and the reason you use the dumpsters because the steel barrel the bucket of the steel dumpster could handle the weight You can we could buy a container. Yeah, but no that didn't work that way. We're talking tonnage And that included all of the reloading presses and everything else Well, guess what the dad used to load this emulation up with the Dylan press and again his hand presses and they would fill
a storage container, an actual storage walk-in shipping container down there full from the floor to the ceiling and front to back with 12 gauge ammo. He didn't go out and buy brand new boxes. He scavenged all the boxes off of all the ranges when he went out to shoot in competition. And he had all his buddies hand his boxes over. He'd give them garbage bags. Hey, just throw your stuff in the bag and let me take it home.
So then when he got home, he'd take all the holes he got for free and he could chunk, could chunk, could chunk, could chunk and between him and his sons and the other kids that he taught 12 gauge trap and skeet to, he had a vast inventory but it cost him only the powder and the shot and a primer. And he had that down to a minimalist science. So don't tell me it can't be done. It's purely a matter of getting motivated.
And whether it's pistol, rifle, or shotgun, we need every stinking shell we've got for this war that's coming up. And we want to change the dynamics so you need to get into reloading as one of these several subjects. And I've been talking about this forever, but I have a special announcement harping on it right now. But I'm also pointing at, again, method, what do you do? Now, by the way, those partial cases, I already told you, we know what we're going to do with reloadable. We know what we can do with Berdam Prime.
We also, when we're processing bullets that we recover off the range, it's a subcategory here. When you recover bullets off the impact area, you're going to get hollow points, jacketed FMJs, you're going to get solid lead and zinc and all kinds of weird stuff. You're going to smelt it all. But when you smelt it, you see all those twisted hollow point jackets you have there that are all distorted and really yucky and sharp?
Those go into your fragmentation buckets in by themselves and when that gets kicked off out of a two-inch, three-inch, four-inch PVC pipe where you take a number 10 can and you lay it sideways like a claymore, when you touch that off, that shrapnel is going to hit something and just tear the living bejesus out of it. And you didn't have to do anything. All you had to do is when you smelt the lead projectiles, the floaties, everything that's a floatie,
goes into the frag bucket. This includes fragmented bonded dirt and zinc or bonded dirt and some of the other tin and anemone. You don't care about that, it comes out as slag, okay? You put that over there in that frag bucket and you take a big scoop of that, you pack it into that PVC pipe or that number 10 can or that juice can to make a directional fragmentation device.
That stuff is just gonna work fantastic when the time comes But you didn't spend anything because you already had to collect it to get the lead that you wanted to cast your 9 millimeter 40 caliber 45 10 millimeter Whatever bullets you're making. You know that works. So you've got a double plus out of this but it's always constant recycling Nothing gets thrown away
Now we're gonna go to the cases that don't look so pretty how many of you ever fired a 40 millimeter grenade launcher boom Anybody anybody fired a 40 mil when you fired a paint marker round it's a dust marker round How many of you fired 40 millimeter grenade round that's a marker practice round their fiberglass aren't they now if you go look these up you'll find that they remember Actually, they were selling complete rounds
that were the 40 millimeter training rounds at UNAML. If you go back and jog your memory on this, I pointed at them several times so you could actually see what Uncle Mark was talking about.
Well, let me point something out about the guy who created that round. He was a smart major, okay? And it was a project to come up with a cheap training round for the 40 millimeter grenade launcher. The traditional round is obviously a spot is a metal is a complete cartridge. Go take a look. You can look them up. Go to whatever you want to. Google, go to image and you can see everything we're talking about here. But the trainer round is fiberglass. If you look, you'll notice it was a case of some kind.
It's not a regular. Yes, not just a primer. It's not just a primer in those training rounds. It's a whole rifle case. 38 short. Yeah, what they were doing is using different raw. They could use anything. They could use what they also did. This is like what the US military did during World War II. You could take reject brass where the throat, like on a .308 round, has failed.
And what they would do is take these and put them in category B, just like we're talking about, cut them to length. 45 ACP cases could be used also and were with different production runs.
And when you cast that fiberglass hull, the case is inserted. It has a standard hot primer. Typically it would be a Magnum primer, or again, a rifle primer works best, but any primer will do. And that capping device becomes the activator for the small squib charge that launches the 40 millimeter paint grenade round.
It's actually a dust powder combination with a big heavy metal object in the middle. And when the eggshell gets busted, the very dry powder spreads and gives you that orange marker that you see. Now again, remember 40 millimeter grenade is low pressure, high velocity.
In other words, it's not very much energy needed to slap the bottom of that round to get it to proper performance range. And remember that 40 millimeter grenade rounds, there is a rifling to the barrel, and it's very critical that that be active because there is a safety in a standard 40 millimeter grenade round that's a spin safety system.
The round has to revolve so many revolutions before it backs off the safety and when the round impacts it will then detonate. This was a critical unique American feature that doesn't exist on foreign grenade launchers. All the other foreign grenade launchers, if you do a boo-boo and drop the round, nose first with enough energy.
Mr. Grenade will not be your friend. But the 40 millimeter US round, a grossly overpriced round when it comes to being made, actually is much safer to use. Here's the only other problem with that though. You have to have the round a set distance away from a target if you're looking at zero target direct.
Or the round will simply be a big bullet hitting somebody because if you don't hit enough revolutions, that clockwork mechanism doesn't back off to open up the primer with the shell. So unlike what you saw in Terminator, remember he comes up a little gangway and he's got the 14mm M79 and he files it very short range. Well, it put a big hole in you, but it's not gonna blow up.
because the safety system hasn't activated unless it's within set distance. So just hide or ruin that movie for you. Well darned. But anyway, this primer system, this is where you can take all of these spent shells and make command detonated devices.
Long as you have an active primer or if you scavenge a primer and rebuild it and maybe even make it over sparked in other words make it so it's Beyond normal set for the volume of combustion that takes place the expansion that takes place this if you go with a hyperactive and overcharged Magnum type primer load for the primer this will more efficiently activate the squib slash the charge and
that is beyond the primer when you set up the very crude firing pin system that activates that primer, which can be done in a number of different ways. And that's too complicated to describe on the air, but just think about it.
Well, all those shells that you can't use for reloading in theory can all be used for category B or category C depending on the situation. In this case, I guess the way I've explained is category C, which is alternate destructive devices as necessary based upon need. And then don't forget everything. If it's a damaged case, a rusted case, a bent case, it goes over into the fragmentation bucket if it can't be used for anything else. Unless it's brass,
and you're casting brass and then you take and route all the brass cases over into the recasting bucket. See how everything in reloading is recycling. If we could get the pew from the initial expo, if you could capture that, we'd use it, but we can't. So we do everything else we can, but nothing gets thrown away. Nothing goes to waste.
everything is rebuildable and reusable. And if somebody teaches you that, and if you learn to do that, you have completely changed the enemy's plan for how they thought they were gonna take down America. Do you understand that? Because the perishables are the manipulative device for control. And ammunition is a perishable.
So you need to get out of your mind the idea that you can't do it. You better start studying. Ignore the naysayers, the idiots, and the fools who try to intentionally misdirect you because they're working for the Fed. See, most of the people are doing the weezer whiner crap are working for the Fed. They're working for the globalists.
And instead of the can't do, it's the can do, figure it out. Now, I'm going to point something out I've mentioned many times on the air about. If you can find, I've got an American rifleman here from 1949. You want an American rifleman from 1940, 41, right around the end to the almost before Pearl Harbor. But after Pearl Harbor, oh my goodness, they're even more interesting. Because the NRA and everybody realized we're going to war.
And so in the old NRA magazines were ideas about how to come up with things so you could fight a war. And that included solutions about interactive interchangeability in parts inventories for certain manufacturers. Information on reloading, information also on cross referencing with loaded ammunition that's already in existence. How could you make do if you didn't have what you actually needed?
What could be done? What could be used? What couldn't be used? They had an entire formula, a cross-referencing formula. They posted a magazine. They wouldn't do this today. The liability issues with the ambulance chasers would be horrible. But when your country has the possibility of invasion, it's amazing how everybody can find their patriotic duty to try and find every stinking way they can to put a bullet in a biped or blow the biped up as in shooting people, okay?
So, we're going to war in 24. We need to be ready to deal with the problems that are at hand. And one of them is munitions inventory. It is the highest priority that all of you embrace these ideas, study, whatever you figure out to whatever degree you're willing to perform. That's fantastic.
But I would recommend that if you can't come up with a system similar to what I'm talking about because you can save components, you may be able to recycle components, you may be able to reuse certain components. Let me give an example. Have you ever looked at a shotgun wad after it's been shot? There's nothing significant to its shape and shape change.
Is it dirty? Depending on if it's might be rainy, might even be wet, but it all can be dried off and cleaning is not really critical if you're looking at reusing a second time for say battlefield, you know, reuse. Anything and everything that you can recover where you can recycle it, you need to be thinking about it now. You go to a trappings keep match, how many wads are sitting out there in front of the range area with you in front of the clay area.
Oh God, it's thousands. As many rounds as per shot, there's as many wads out there. If I want to make a short wad without me maybe cutting out cardboard, here's a dirty little trick. Break out your straight blade razor, your box cutter, and carve off all the butterflies but save the base. What? Well, there's a wad right there for free. Go ahead. Oh, jump in there.
Yeah, section mics. Yeah. Once you run out of, for your six inch PVC clip, you eventually run out of all your scrap metals, you know, primers, even pieces of old mail and barbed wire, which a good substitute would be if you know anybody who makes arrowheads.
They'll, any kind of chert or flint rock, if you break it up and put it in there, if you're the flint knapper, his pieces come out like they're small thin discs. And when they go through the air, they whistle and they just pretty much chop everything in front of them. They don't go far, but anything in front of it's going to be ripped to shreds. Hello?
Gravel will work if you had to. Pea gravel is horrific. All of these, for close, close range, anything that you can find, in fact, mix it up. Throw some gravel in there with the scrap metal if you're getting low. Give it a little extra oomph. But it's the idea of that, you know, you don't necessarily have to kill the aggressor. You might shred them real bad. They're still screaming and making all kinds of noise. Maybe they even packed out the steep. But no matter what, they're not coming back to the conflict.
Not for a very long time, if ever. Keep that in mind. Everything that we have, I would not do this. I'm not gonna take my brand new 1,220 nuts and bolts and put them into that mission. Manufactured goods that are a Class A manufactured good or even B have to be used for their original intended purposes. So it's the scrap.
the debris, even the rust chunks. You know what? You think of behind places you got chunks of rust laying around that are already flakes off of vehicles, things like that. There's all kinds of places you can scavenge material. Now you load that up with everything else and when it gets touched off, it's like you said, you got little flat pieces of sheet metal, scimitar pieces of heavy chunks of rusted frame.
where it flakes off of the body itself. Guys, all this stuff. Another one, a real hasty emergency anti-personnel material. I've told you before, you can have lots of car wrecks. How does safety glass break when it breaks?
Why these wonderful little cubes that are again about oh an eighth of an inch or a quarter inch in size and you load those in with some of that sheet metal and everything else when you pull the trigger or touch off the switch Well, I'd say that'd be pretty horrific
We want it to be horrific for our enemy. Our enemy who thinks that they're going to waddle out and kick in doors and kill the cat and the dog, rape the wife, maybe rape the children, murder the family, laugh it up at the cop bar later on. Yuck, yuck, yuck, wasn't it funny? Look at the face on grandma when they came through the door and they executed grandma in her kitchen. Cuz they said she had a rolling pin and that was a lethal weapon so they mowed her down cuz
They wanted to give the Mexican street gangs that are in black uniforms standing next to them a chance to kill Americans to get their blood. Yeah, you know, that kind of stuff. Cuz you know that's coming. They're giving the illegals guns, and that's cuz they figured they're gonna use the illegals standing in uniform right next to whatever punk traitors we have in this government against the American people.
They're already making excuses before it was, oh, they're not doing it, but then as they're not doing it, they're doing it. But we're all there, they're gonna only have certain, a lot of, a whole bunch of, they're gonna put all of them in uniform because they hate America and they're trying to kill the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. And to do that, they gotta murder America. They're gonna try to murder us.
So we show no kindness to them, not one of them. And any of them that are cooperating with the secret police that are arming up illegal aliens. Or right now the FFLs, of course, the latest thing is if they got a pad on the head and squeeze on the ass and some special paperwork, that they're gonna circumvent all of the BS that came in as illegal aliens. And now they're gonna let them buy guns through the FFLs. Whoever is that idea that is, they need to be dragged out and executed now.
They need to be dragged out and shot. Anybody promoting that the illegal aliens be in uniform, that they'd be involved in the military in any way, shape, or form, and that they'd be in this country in that configuration, any way, shape, or form. Parties who support that should be executed immediately. They're involved in open direct treason in criminal violation on a massive scale against the sovereignty of the United States. They need to be gone. I won't hesitate on that. I don't care who hears it. That's just how it is. So anyway, I'll tell you what.
here, let's do something else. We got time and I'll tell you what, because of what's coming, we're going to go into war in 24. Hopefully, they've been giving you ideas. You got to get pumped up. You got to deal with your technology. Edward, if you could keep your rifle by your side. Valderant here.
And again for everybody, songs from the Second Civil War over on YouTube, a bunch of traditional American shanties and or foreign pieces that were recovered by El Doron. And for all of you out there, we're going to play Keep Your Rifle By Your Side, the recovered version, originally from Far Cry, by the way. Here we go.
And we'll look low, we'll look everywhere we go And soon the looters will know that they can't hide If they come loud and they come fast We'll shoot first so we can last Keep your rifle by your side Singing, they just won't stay away Singing, oh Lord
For this I won't need pay when we take a stand. No, we must protect our land. Keep your rifle by your side. In them come night they'll have our children in their sight. So stand guard in every pass from north to south. And scream, they can shout, they will never push us out. Keep your rifle by your side. Singing, no love.
They just won't stay away singing Oh Lord for this I won't need pay when we take a stand No we must protect our lands Keep your rifle by your side They'll have tanks cause they've got funding from the banks But we won't fall as long as we can fight So they'll go on and say we hate you But they won't get past the gate Keep your rifle by your side
Singing, they just won't stay away. Singing, oh Lord for this I won't need pay when we take a stand. No, we must protect our lands. Keep your rifle by your side. Have allies in the east from the Great Plains to Tennessee. They help us hold with all that we do need. East comes another way from Red Sand, Fran or Bern, LA. Keep your rifle.
Oh, pie your side, singin' No, Lord, they just won't stay away, singin' Oh, for this I won't need pay when I see their face No, I must protect my place, keep my ride Oh, pie my side, singin' Just won't stay away, singin' No, Lord, this I won't need pay, wear a face No, I must protect my place, keep my ride
I'm a boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy
You'll be pulling off enemy corpses, whatever you can get your hands on, as long as Rigamortis hasn't set in, we're gonna keep you in the fight. Even Rigamortis does set in, we're just gonna prop you up with a two-wheeled alley, put you someplace where you can take some more bullets, and that'll save maybe a few more lives. One way or another, we'll keep you in the fight, son. One way or another.
So again for everybody it is Thursday. We are headed towards the weekend. Want to say hi to our friends at Camp Emmert, Camp Emerson, New Camp Stasza, Camp Wayland North, the Ogham Aranges, Naga Hitcham.
Also, Wolf and Fox, and by the way, they got snow up there as you know, so dress accordingly, you know what's going on there. And I will say again to Camp Whalen North, this is a warning order for people who will be training there. There may be a change in schedule shortly because of additional testing that is going to take place with regard to our sensor technology research. They're going to need about a week's worth of time there. Go ahead, call her, jump in there.
This time, we're talking about another 18 to 14 inches up this way, and temperatures in the single digits to 10, 11, 12 degrees during the day. So we've been talking negative that night. It's Michigan. That means dress accordingly, right? Make sure you're layered and make sure you understand the limitations of the technology you have in hand.
Square your equipment away before you go out Understand don't touch the metal when you start getting that kind of weather don't touch the metal with bare skin Most common mistake made by people in under those those conditions is again keep those gloves on Whenever you think and you had a cold weather operations when you start looking at sub-zero You'd have to think like an astronaut
That's the only way I can describe it think like an astronaut everything has to be thought thought through also step also make sure you also Also, make sure you got stuff for in case you yeah go and get your shovels and white whatnot cuz These roads get pretty bad up here in the middle of where this I think snowplots forget how to follow the roads up here but make sure you got like chains and
salt, and now, board, and shovels too for the traveling up here. Yeah, as a matter of fact, we've noticed this because everybody's had some pretty lean years for snow. They were able to steal that money that they should have maintained for road operations. That's the problem. They've been used to stealing and thieving from the accounts. And they're not taking care of the roads necessarily the way that they should.
So assume the worst and you won't be disappointed. Be prepared to deal with bad situations that just pop up randomly in the file based upon piss poor performance on the part of the township or the counties. We got some really good locations here. We've got others that are just terrible for not doing their job. So you have to, it's a throw the dice, it's catch as catch 10. You never know what you're gonna run into.
and better to be prepared just in case you got it. If nothing else, even if you just have to stay in place, make sure that you've got everything that you would need to operate in the field if you are downed. And not the least which I would remind everybody that guys were in Michigan, you're probably not too far from something right there off the road that can be burned. Especially, and on that note too, we have the ash borer problem here in Michigan.
So, in most parts of the lower end of the state, there is burnable material that's already cured, it's already aged, and doesn't require anything other than a little bit of cut and some thermalization, and you have yourself some fire. So, let's think accordingly. Be prepared. Don't forget to have fire starter. Make up little fire starter kits.
So you have those on hand, wherever you go, you might have snow, but you've got, this is Michigan, we're covered by forest. Just that simple. Remember that family that years ago, they got stuck out, the guy went with his land navigator. We kind of always, the poor bugger, probably he did it intentionally. His logic was that he had a four wheel drive vehicle and he could go across country. And so he went down one of the snow roads.
for the area that he was passing through and followed the land navigator down roads that normally would be gated and shut for the season. Why they weren't, I don't know. Remember they got stuck? He went through all the usual survival procedures for the politically correct.
But he had forest all around him. He had all the wood that he needed. But oh, I'm sure he was told as a good eco freak that, oh, we're not going to hurt the woods. We're not going to even burn the old wood. So instead, he was burning the tires on the cars and all the other fun stuff that is notorious for the how to survive in the wild. Problem is he then decided to walk out to get help.
And meanwhile, apparently the family had some communications with him. They went out with a helicopter, a private helicopter, looking for him. And they were probably hoping to make an epic movie or TV series or television episode for something out of this. Well, dad in the process of not being properly clothed and not properly equipped, ended up dead in a doornail, found in stuck legs up in a snowdrift.
Again, prior proper planning prevents PIF pore performance. Number one, again, well, trust me, someone's going to see if something's burning. So you might have to sacrifice a tree. But one way or another, somebody would have been able to see where I was located without taking a risk for the damage to damage the family in the way that he did. And that is something that we, again, can't allow. Prior proper planning prevents PIF pore performance. Think ahead.
Well, you can always take it off if you got it, but keep it with you. But not if you don't have it.
That's why it's better to have it with you and pile it up in the trunk, put it in the back seat, whatever you got to do. And like you said, if you have to ventilate or if you have to cool, if you have to reduce calorie buildup, guess what? Open equipment up or take it off, take layers off, but take material with you, extra. There is no such thing in cold weather. There's no such thing as extra. Basically, you'll find everything you need.
Probably, yeah, well everything you carry is probably going to be needed. Here's the way to describe it. Again, I'd advise that people who wear glasses or if you're wearing goggles, make sure you have some anti-fog. If you recall the winter movements that we made,
It was really, really cold where I lived and I came up and it was not quite so cold where you were, but I was dressed for like zero and it wound up being like 28 degrees. And once I started sweating, the inside of my glasses said, oh, we're going to go opaque and you won't be able to see anything. So that would have obviously been done away with just a little anesthetic wipe on the glasses would have fixed the problem. Over. It only takes a second. Materials available over the counter.
take the time, track it down, and make a point of using the technology.
And this is the season. Don't worry about holding back things either. That's another thing. You know, if you have the opportunity to use the equipment, use the equipment. Use what it is that you've purchased because you need to develop, you've got to develop skills. You're going to have to develop yourself. This is where, you know, a practical application situations are very useful. Yep, it really is the kind of condition I have to use this equipment under.
And if I implement all of the rules, I'm going to find out whether or not I got it right. And especially since, don't forget spare socks, spare gloves. Why? Because, well, we're now what Tom was just talking about is we're headed into cold dry. And cold dry, again, you don't have to be issues with, you know, taking equipment off and
acquiring moisture, being loaded up with moisture, then freezing up in place, and that's where the damage occurs. Cold dry is safer in many ways over cold wet, because unless you make a point of getting close to a material and allowing for your calories to break something down,
It's an adapted environment. You've worked into it. But cold wet, the barrier right now, we're in between that. It's still not quite that cold out there. And the ground isn't even fully frozen where we are here.
So, the problem you've got is you build up moisture, all layers get wet, and that means transmission of calorie reduction. In other words, it's a cooling system. It's what your car does with the radiator, only it's doing it just by contact with you. It's going to be A, sucking calories out of your body and dumping them out into the cold where it's useless.
And in the process puts you at a risk situation. Hypothermia is nothing to laugh about. The one thing I will say is, you know, everybody's always argued, which would you rather do, burn to death or freeze to death? Both of them, you know, if everybody goes, oh, I'd like to freeze to death because it's painless. Yeah, it's painless if you if we don't find you and bring you back.
But if you've ever experienced a frostbite or a freeze cold, a freeze injury, guys, coming back is like you've been dipped in fire. Okay, whatever component you have, this is why again, we're gonna try to avoid this. But unfortunately what happens is there always seems to be a counterbalance with God's plan and nature and the way it's built.
So yeah, you kind of fade off quietly and you go on to the grave, but then all of a sudden you're a complacent and you thought you were dying and then somebody slaps you around a little bit. They're moving your body and then all of a sudden you realize that your body, your torso is still kind of functioning. Can't feel your hands, can't feel your feet, not yet anyway. But then all of a sudden- It's gonna be ugly. Yeah, that nature kicks in.
So let's try to avoid this. It's just out of policy. Okay, let's try to avoid this by making sure that we understand the environment we're working in and how to properly protect ourselves from it. And that's something that you all need to think about. Again, anybody and everybody I know that has, well, it's amazing. Cold is fasting. See, if you get burned to death, you lose body parts.
Usually it flails stuff off your body and rises as ash or white ash and it's horrible and terrible, but you're dead. Whereas freezing, it's like you were all preserved and waiting right there for the pain. And so when they start bringing it back is where your sensory system tells you all about what it's like. And top to bottom, front to back, it is, it's the pain factory, okay?
But you probably survived. Now here's the interesting thing, kind of like when you talk about hybridation in spacecraft. Amazingly enough, in the past it used to be they would carve body parts off you. They have now changed that policy with cold weather casualties. And even with frostbitten fingers and toes, they will not initially amputate. Most policy
Most doctors who are working in that environment are working with that type of casualty. Looking at what they are there now is the social norm. They will leave the parts on as long as possible and see what it is that progressively breaks down before amputation because they have found that they were rather surprised at how much of your body will survive a freeze.
Now, traditionally, one of the reasons in the past that you had to amputate was because of or carve off flesh off of a body is because when it goes necrophilic, then of course we have infection. But today with the many different types of biotics that we have available, the system can be flooded to fight and save the healthy tissue. And then only a certain amount of tissue sloths off through the process of regeneration.
That sounds horrible. Yeah, but you might still have toes, might still have fingers. You might still have a lot of body parts you didn't expect to keep. And this is something that having read up a lot on the situation as it's developed, it is rather fascinating because again, the only thing that's made this possible is are the silins. If it weren't for the silins, no, because the body very quickly reacts, responds in a very narrow and specific way.
It is catastrophic and it ain't pretty to smell either, by the way. That's the one thing about gaseous gangrene. There are things that you don't ever want to see or experience, but once you do, you will never forget them. I can show you pictures. Yeah. Well, actually, firsthand and first person recollection. So again, heads up. This is why we need to be thinking ahead. I don't need to hear about people being hurt when there's no need for that.
There's and we can take all the precautions necessary. So we went from reloading obviously to something that's a very interesting subject for this time here But something we do need to tap on because we don't want to see you hurt So go on go actually I'm actually a church painting So I'm gonna bust bust in here before I start doing I got some corners. I got a drywall If you were to have brass and or steel and or nickel and or little well maybe bloom
If you picked it up outside, let's say you're not out in Arizona where it's buff dry and you're here where it's humid and where there's rain and where the grass is wet when you picked up your grass that you just picked up, would it be, it wouldn't have anything to do with the heat annealing on the cases if you were to run that into a 250 degree oven for 20 minutes, would it? To get all the moisture out before you put in the storage? Nobody would find any gain in the rain when you get into the storage.
Right, you could just easily use a hair dryer or a fan system and bringing it indoors where you have any kind of existing ambient heat. That would be enough to dry everything off. You're not going to, you would be arresting the probability of additional oxidation by doing that, but thank you for bringing it up. You don't want to throw wet brass into storage.
You either air dry it whatever you're gonna do just to be again the idea is to minimize handling and maximize result So the first rule is if you can pick the brass or ammunition up as quickly as possible during the winter months The biggest problem you've got is yeah You may have snow on the ground and maybe go out to the range and your brass is flying in a lot of different directions Depending on the weapons you're shooting
Try to either placemat it with tarps because looks like the carbine and the AR-15 and the AK are all very predictable about where the brass is going to fall. Carbines are phenomenally predictable. You can actually lay a small carp down and collect virtually all of your brass. Just don't take any snow into the area that's the impact point. Pay attention to what you're doing. You got to think a little bit.
But no matter what, yeah, you do want to You can air dry or you could use a heating system You don't need to really use the stove, but that would be a way to clean up dried off. It wouldn't have to be that hot Yeah, we actually go lowest temperature possible leave the the Stove cracked a little bit and you know lay a tray of stuff in there As you know, I've saved an electric stove and a gas stove for that very purpose for either a kneeling
or for drying. Just something to think about there. And have both on hand because you never know what power source you're going to have available. But good point. Thank you for bringing that up because no, we do not want to throw in the storage on top of dry brass or dry steel. Anything that might be cross-contaminated because as long as you're scared, you have moisture, you're going to get oxidation. So we need to avoid that at all costs.
We're at the top, we gotta get out of the way. We've gone plus a year. There's all kinds of ideas. I've looked for anything. What can you do to have the resources that you can? And you're amazing. And you're doing great. So people have done all of this work again. We just need to dig it out and reproduce it in the world for everybody else. It's 8 o'clock morning. A regular earthquake. 8 to 9 guys.
It's a tall miracle, it's a tall I want you to focus on the Lord tonight and sing this wonderful song that simply says I need the Lord that we need him. When he was a young one, certain appeal, he got it to kids. Oh, sorry.
from the very start.
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 is 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 traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seasonally 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 will leave. Yours send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedom 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 eat God given right, and pray to God, get the torch of freedom burning bright, as I awoke he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are free, but we have ourselves to blame.
For even now as tyrants trampled each God-given right we only watch him tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep What would be your answer he called out from the grave gentlemen. This is the evening intelligence report. I'm Mark Kirk II
One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories West, south, north, and northeast. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on...
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It is Thursday, the end of the three hour broadcast for the Intel report. One more whole hour to go here. It is the 11th of January. It is the 16th year of open. So obvious and in your face, Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K 2023. Forgive me 2024 old habits.
old earth calendar 2024 battle for the Republic, the dance of swords, let the dance continue. And it is wintery day, we're supposed to possibly get snow tonight, but we're in an odd spot with the way the snow or the weather has been hitting. We have a little dusting on the ground to make things white and green. I got grass poking up everywhere and a lot of parts of real estate here are not really touched that heavily at all.
But by 2 o'clock in the morning we're supposed to start getting a little bit of snow. We'll see what happens. We know that we're getting snow in the upper part of the state and they always do. That's uphill. We're at the bottom of the state. We're the trolls below the bridge. That's what the Uppers call us in their neck of the woods. In this case, we're the bottom, the very bottom of the bridge down at the bottom and in the flats between Shikongo and Lake Erie.
And the weather does differently here. This is the bottom of the state where we get the big blows, create the big circular weather patterns you're gonna see now through to spring around the Great Lakes. As the freezes continue and everything starts to cap over on the lakes, we get this Coriolis effect where it goes just as it does during the summer from one lake to the next and it starts a spiral, which from satellite actually almost looks like a hurricane.
with the way the snow fronts hit. So the Ontario Peninsula gets hit, the bottom of the state gets hit. And it's kind of funny because it rolls right around Lake Michigan up to the UP, back down again, and it can go both ways. So depending upon which front hits from which direction. And we are, you better be ready for it. You got to be an idiot or fool if you're not ready for Michigan winter weather.
Well, maybe you're a move in. Okay, we've got to forgive that. But for anybody else, if you've lived here all your life, don't tell me, oh, I've never seen anything like this before. If so, you had to have your head so far up your arse, you couldn't be pulled out with a crowbar. This is Michigan. Give us 15 minutes and the weather will be different again. And it always is. So, one of the things that we were talking about in the tour block was reloading. Most important here too, though I would also say is again, Palmetto State Armory is now in full process.
of not only loading ammunition, but building most of their components. Now I do not know about powder. I would be very curious about that if they do a powder mill. And if they do, that would be great. But as it is, one of the things that we do have as a confirmation is that Palmetto State Armory is going to be making their own rifle primers. They already are. And that will be a new production line. Now it may not be under the Palmetto flag. It may be under the sister company that they have.
But it doesn't make any difference. It's going to be a new primer company. They're making boxer primers. And also what's been confirmed is that the new 762 by 39 steel cases being made by Palmetto in country in the US will be boxer primed, which means that they will be reloadable. Okay?
Now, one thing I didn't mention with reloading, with personal reloading, the preferences are up and down depending on what kind of cases you're going to be reloading. But if you can, carbide dies, carbide dies would be your best choice for a lot of reloading and for keeping your tolerances to spec for a longer period of time with wear and tear on the dies.
But especially if steel case is available, you want to try and find 7.62x39 carbide dies and you want to start buying them now in preparation for what's coming. Now I would also point out something I talked about in two hour block earlier this afternoon had to do with several different tools. One of them actually takes the existing steel case 7.62x39 and it runs a new primer hole and reams the primer pocket.
so that it mates up with existing small rifle primer tolerances, but also it takes your steel case and converts it into boxer prime. Now, again, anything and everything that you shoot, you should save all brass. If you're already reloading, always save the spent primers and sort them now in preparation for the future. If you're going to D prime 9 millimeter, that's small pistol,
Put those into separate containers, collect all your spent slash used when you de-prime. Put them in a one gallon jug or a three gallon kitty litter container. Those are perfect. The ones with the big wide mouth. And separate your primers by type. Small and large pistol, small and large rifle. You should have at least four different containers.
And if you're doing shot shells, you should save all spent primers for your shotgun shells, which I recommend you do all of the above. You should be doing pistol, rifle, and shotgun. The primers can be rebuilt, but again, to make the components is a lot more work. But to have the components in hand, don't waste them, hang on to them. Go ahead, callers, you've been there, please. What is the smallest caliber that you can reload anyways?
Anything that's center fire could be reloaded. Now here's the thing, you know, thank you for bringing it up, Tom. Twenty-two can be reloaded also. Twenty-two rimfire, but most people don't have it. You know, in the past we didn't bother with it that much because it used to be 97 cents or a dollar fifteen for a 50 round box of twenty-two ammo. In fact, I've got boxes that are marked 37 cents a box.
Imperial 22 rim, 22 caliber rimfire ammunition, Imperial brand. And that's from way, way, way, way back. But it's always been relatively cheap. But when they did all the scams with the 90s, and with all the other ammo grabs and bands and everything else, 22 took a major bite up in terms of price. So at this point in time, you can actually buy
a combination, it has a bullet mold and also the powder and even the reagent, the activating agent for reactivating the primer on a rimfire cartridge, then you could reload 22, rimfire. It's just that in the past it wasn't economical, but now with the price that 22 is gone to again, it would behoove you to look into the idea of doing that. Otherwise, 17 caliber,
You know, you've got 17 wildcat cartridges. There's a number of different 17 caliber center fire projectile based typically on the all the 38 special case rimmed, but there's 17, 20, 22. I think we got a 21 caliber out there floating around somewhere right now. For the fun of it, somebody just built a 21 caliber something.
But as long as it's boxed or primed it can be reloaded. The big thing is, see, think about this when you're reforming the die on let's say a 17 caliber, the only concern is that you're able to get that deep priming pin down inside the case to push out the primer. Everything else is just a matter of putting everything back together. So the one thing about the 17 caliber is because of the way most dies are built, you have a
You have a retainer in the middle of the die to hold the deep priming pin. Well, when you start getting down into 22 and 17 caliber, it's pretty tight if not possible. So what you have to do is you have to deep prime and high or hyper extended deep prime or use a separate extended deep priming tool to pop the primer out of the case. Because the hole in the top 17 caliber won't accommodate many of your dye forms on the inside.
So that's the only restriction. Beyond that, anything and everything out there can be reloaded. Everything can be reloaded. 22 can be. What we used to do with 22, to be quite honest, I would always rake up 22 brass. Why? Because we used to cast a lot of brass objects, and if I had 300 pounds of brass, I could give it to a foundry down here to the west of where I'm sitting.
And they would cast us a howitzer or a cannon barrel. And so what we do is save up all the junk brass, the stuff we couldn't do anything with or any brass plumbing fixtures or whatever, but we pile it all up. As long as you had 300 pounds of brass and you had the dollars, it was $125, 300 pounds of brass and $125 and get you a two pounder cannon barrel.
Just to give you an idea, look at what a two-pounder basically is. It's the Civil War infantry cannon, basically, and used by small formations and units all over on both sides, both the Patriot and then the Imperial.
The big thing here again is remember unless it's crushed most brass and you can breathe life back into it Another thing that I would point out is if you have the basic cases Remember some ammunition you might have to build from other cases Well, I might not necessarily want to sacrifice my boxer prime non-corrosive Materials or at least not all of them, but there's military brass It's per damn prime that people don't necessarily want to mess with right away
If this base spec for the case is close, that's the case that I'm gonna sacrifice to build a new specialized round that's maybe a military round that's obsolete, or maybe for some of the new Wildcat rounds, if the base is correct. Something I pointed out the other day here, 450 Bushmaster is a great upper receiver to have on hand because you could take tired cases
Cut off the appropriate excess from that particular tired case that the 450 is based upon and Reem it and case size it and load it and it's a straight case bang bang Which is really great. There's nothing you can really go wrong with that. The important thing is how you seat the bullet Everything else is straightforward and again literally straightforward. It's a straight case
So, the 450 Bushmaster dies should be a priority. Picking up a 450 Bushmaster upper, nothing fancy. I'm not talking about, the way to do this is like you're buying a bag of novice golf clubs.
Or you know just amateur golf clubs. You don't need every one of your uppers to have hyper picatinny slotted rails, extra lights, extra radars, ground surveillance technology, blah blah blah. No, you need an upper that is least expensive but serviceable, 16 inch barrel, preferably an M4 configuration because that'll keep a little lighter.
etc. But take your pick whatever Bear Creek or Palmetto make, but I would get a for instance right now if you don't have an AR-15 you should buy the cheapest AR-15 you could afford. The next thing you do and buy the AR-15 and 556 unless you want to buy it first in 762 by 39. Hey, this is America you pick out what you want to do. But I would have four basic calibers and upper receivers for one receiver lower right away as quick as I could 556
762x39, 300 blackout, and 450 Bushmaster. And either A, you're gonna find those first three calibers somewhere on the shelf, or solution four is if I can't find the 450 Bushmaster off the shelf, I can scavenge brass. With a set of dies, I can chop, form, and load, and I can feed that 450 all day.
See how that works? In other words, in a more primitive environment, I don't have to go caveman. And you know what's cool? Is all these engineers and all these aficionados that have done research and have been playing with the platform. Guys, they've done all the work. Hey Mark. Now, you still need the reloading tech to get it done. But we can do this. Go ahead, jump in there, caller. Hey, Mark. It's John from Kentucky. I like your idea of the 450.
Have you ever thought about putting a heavier slug in it and maybe a little less powder or special operations? Good point. Again, remember you can make up for velocity with weight and yes, that would be a solution much like the 450-450 silent rounds that we made years ago.
You could do the same basic work. Yeah, remember the action doesn't have to work, right? I mean guys, let's think about this. If I'm doing placement shooting and I just want to take out a sentry, if I put a 300 or 400 grain bullet in there and I proportionally, you know, advance the powder to where it's just enough to push it down the tube but keeps it subsonic, that's a freight train when it hits.
And if you understand bullet placement, where it hit, then that big bore, 45 caliber rifle slug going down range, oh yeah, that would be the end of whoever you're pointed in at.
especially for quiet sensory removal because you're going to eliminate the report, you know, the crack, sonic crack, and you're also going to reduce most of the combustion of sonic wave that takes place where when it leaves the barrel you get that boom that you hear. And then if you add on top of that suppression technology, which is all over the place, we'll be in wartime. In wartime, nobody's going to worry about any rules. That's all out the window.
But even without a suppressor, yeah, you're absolutely right. You can take that 450 Bushmaster and make it a hushpuppy round real quick. Another thought. Look at your 410 loading papers, you know, the book on reloading 410. You could probably make your own cardboard, put in about 5 8 ounce of number, I don't know, 4.
and a cart and you'd have a shotgun. Oh yeah, okay good point there is that again remember shotgun shells used to be solid brass. Yes. In fact if you go to cowboy guns right now if you go to cowboy guns
Depending on, I think that it's a matter of the code because I've seen guys using conventional shotgun shells for competition. But I think traditional requires that all the ammunition match up. And originally, shotgun shells were full wall brass from top to bottom. More expensive, which is why the paper became so popular because the idea of a paper shell with a brass base worked out just fine.
But you could yeah, you could do well you could do I'll take one of the things you could do is a double lot buck to repel it just like we traditionally did for night fire, you know for muskets and The difference is you you probably could get it even though it would probably cycle if you did that And which would be interesting because basically every time you pull the trigger it'd be like a three round burst So that's good work. Oh, yeah
Yeah, they're becoming harder to get, but they are out there, which is something that, again, there's some companies out of Arkansas, Missouri, and as I mentioned earlier, Utah, that do have inventories of the flechettes out there to pick up. There's two different weights. They actually were three or four originally. But all of those would work in both a shot shell and, yeah, you could come up with a little
standoff plate to go inside the straight case 450 bush master and you could nest it. Yeah, you could nest it with a whole big clutch of Flechette Dirts. And you could use the umm... Sabot. A Sabot. And a smaller round. Yeah, I'm good with that. Go ahead. Yeah.
Well, it's good real quick the okay with the flesh yet now there's another advantage Remember there's tons of Sabo for 45 made out there Yeah, because of muzzle loading so actually be able to now here's the difference is rather than going would say a Pistol bullet you could go with a rifle projectile But either one what would happen is you have this is good It's gets where you go the other direction guys with loading you have a lighter powder charge
slapping the end of that so you have low pressure high velocity again and so you're using less powder but you're going to end up with greater velocity coming out of the muzzle with a projectile traveling that much faster. And remember you've got lands and grooves in that 450 bush master so you're going to get bullet rotation and spin
In addition to the fact that that SABO is traveling at a higher velocity when it leaves, it's going to dislocate from the projectile, let it travel downrange at much higher velocities for less energy spent. That would be a good application for an AP round. Yes. Again, if somebody with a lathe was willing to spend some time with some drill rod,
You know, you wouldn't have to temper steel. You just use existing drill rod. Might want to temper it if you want, if you had the resource. But drill rod would be sufficient, brought down to a dark front end, a spire point, like we did with the penetrators in the M2AP round, 30-out-6 or the M2AP, M250 caliber round.
That would yes also be devastating and we are looking at body armor and we are looking at mechanicals They keep bragging up how we should all be terrified to the point where we just want to surrender because they're gonna have robotoids They're gonna have nematodes and robotoids and hemorrhoids and all kinds of stuff. So I have the technology deal with it I love the possible loose. I love the possibilities with that particular caliber. I think I'm going to one right away
I recommend it, I really do. 20 inch barrel? Yes. Not yours. You know, what's interesting about that is right now, Bear Creek has had some good buys on the 450 Bushmaster upper. Remember guys, you don't have to buy the whole gun. This is why, like I said from the beginning of this, buy an AR-15. I don't care what model you get. I don't care how cheap it is. Nobody will care. And let me point something out. Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang.
You know what, if you want a different lower, see all those black uniform punks that were coming to grab the guns? They're carrying automatic weapons. They're carrying and your tax dollars paid for probably top of the line $3,000 and $4,000 weapons. Some of those are gonna get shot. If the uppers are damaged, you're gonna take and pop those two pins, take that upper off to the side. Well, guess what? You take your Anderson lower.
and you set that off to the side and put something else out of it, but maybe you got a lot of money tied up into a really nice 450 Bushmaster upper. You take one of those class three liberated lowers, pop, pop, hook it up to your AR-15 and it'll do anything the other side's gun will do. But quieter. Yeah. Yeah. See, so, this right now,
Yeah, right now don't worry about select fire guys. You're gonna be making enemy corpses. You know, the bad guys are gonna get their ass shot off. When that happens, that's where you acquire the weapons that you don't have to modify them. They don't have to be improvised. If you're really good at putting a single shot right in somebody's arse and you put them down hard. Remember, you know, one hit, you know, is far superior to 500 near misses. You know, hits count, misses don't.
So, you practice at just putting the biggest ass bullet on an aggressor in a black uniform, going hut hut hut, come to confiscate guns. And when you pluck that from his warm dead hands, it's easier than cold dead hands, and you strip him bare ass naked of all the other equipment he's got.
Again, you're gonna end up with all of the bells and whistles, you paid for it, they stole the money from you at gunpoint, government stole the money from you at gunpoint, they made these things up, put them together, now they're yours. Right now, focus on being able to sustain the fight, focus on, again, diversification for the sake of deep supply.
And I'm telling you right now that this is a mind screw for the enemy because you've already heard, and in fact I'll tell you what, we'll play it again. Edward, if you could, it wasn't the latest, but in the last day, guns and gadgets, they're coming from the 5.56. So I'll tell you what, let's play that one again for everybody, and it'll help you to understand why Uncle Mark is emphasizing diversification of calibers. Well, you can't do this with most guns.
But you can do this with the AR-15. And I would, go ahead, call her, keep in there. No, it's not a big deal. Palmetto, since you were talking about Palmetto State Armory and ARs, right now they have the 16 inch upper. You'll have to buy the bolt carrier group and a charging handle. Let me double check with it. $149.99, so $150.
And then they have the lower complete stock and everything for 120. And then I also checked their site. They do have belt carry groups. The cheapest one is $80. So for a little over 350 bucks, you can have an AR minus the charging handle, which those are, I don't know, about $23. I'm not 100% but.
You can have an AR for about 150. And that is over at State Armory. That's Palmetto State Armory. They're coming after it. 223 and 556, guys. Dude, you'll be here right there. It's almost like some of us predicted this with this new Office of Gun Violence Prevention in the White House. Before I get everybody riled up, I want to thank the sponsor of the video, and that's CMMG.
CMMG makes some of the finest things that go boom and bang. They make them on all sizes. You pick your color, your chambering, your length, all kinds of cool things that go boom and bang. I am very partial to the Mark 47. Love that. And how can you not love CMMG? They even make meat snacks. They're awesome. CMMG, use my code, GNG10, save huge. 10% on everything there. Everything. If you know what I mean. Alright guys.
I know that most of you are aware of this, but I'm going to put it out there anyway. Your state attorney general is the chief law enforcement officer for your state, which is funny because 99.9% of all AGs in the history of this land were never in law enforcement. They're typically just attorneys. Not a shot at attorneys, but attorneys don't enforce law. They are working in the court structure. It's just, I guess, semantics.
But 20 of them in this country, 20 attorneys general have sent a letter to Joe Biden's new office of gun violence prevention, which uses our taxpayer monies to pay for that position and everything they do. And what do they do? They look to violate the Constitution. So we're paying our own, our taxes, everybody who goes to work, work harder.
Because millions depend on you and your tax money is being used by this administration to violate your Second Amendment rights. Yes. On the screen right now is a letter they sent to Joe Biden. And this, guys and gals, we have not heard the end of. Of course, Latisha James, who is actively in the process of suing the NRA, she penned this, and I'll tell you the others who have joined this.
This went to Stephanie Feldman yesterday, who's the director of the White House's Office of Second Amendment and Constitutional Violations. And this is regarding the manufacture and sale of military-grade ammunition at the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant and its use in mass shootings.
Dear Director Feldman, we write on behalf of the states of New York, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.
to express concern about recent reports that billions of rounds of military-grade ammunition manufactured at the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant have been sold on the commercial market, leading to their use in many of the most tragic mass shootings in recent history. We ask your office to conduct an investigation into the contracting process that led to this situation.
and to take action to ensure that military grade and military-subsidized ammunition stays out of civilian hands. According to recent reports, the ammunition made at Lake City for our military has been sold to civilians in mass quantities, leading to these bullets being used in mass shootings, including a shooting in which three law enforcement officers were killed and multiple school shootings.
Lake City rounds have become the ammunition of choice for use in mass shootings including the Marjory Stonum Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida, in which 17 children and adults were murdered and 17 children and adults were wounded.
the Tree of Life synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in which 11 people were murdered as they gathered for Shabbat morning service and Torah study, and an additional six were wounded. The Rob Elementary School in Yuvali, Texas, in which 19 elementary school students and two of their teachers were murdered, and an additional 17 people were wounded.
and the racist massacre at the supermarket in Buffalo, New York, in which ten people were murdered and three were wounded. The shooter in the Buffalo massacre discussed Lake City ammunition as, quote, the best barrier penetration ammo I can get, end quote, compounding the horror.
That's why despite the massive criminality and corruption of the Clintons, the Bidens, the Obamas, and all the rest, none of them ever get indicted or ever get investigated. They're totally protected by a fake and disgusting system. The bullets used in his violence were subsidized by American taxpayers as the federal government has apparently invested more than $860 million to improve production.
Ammunition from Lake City is manufactured for military use and does not belong in our communities. Federal courts have repeatedly noted the military nature of 5.56mm rounds, which are used in military-issued rifles such as the M16.
Military-style weapons, and the ammunition specifically manufactured for them, should be limited to military use. Even if military-grade ammunition were appropriate for the civilian market, its sale to private parties should not be subsidized by taxpayer dollars.
In the short term, we asked your office to investigate the contracting and manufacturing practices that led to so many billions of military-grade rounds being sold in our communities, and to issue a public report with recommendations about how to end the diversion of military ammunition into civilian hands. In the long term, we asked the White House to ensure that future production contracts prohibit the sale of military weapons and ammunition to civilians.
The states recognize the critical importance of military readiness in an uncertain world, and of making sure that the military has adequate supplies and reserve production capacity in order to meet its needs in the event of a crisis.
Nonetheless, the federal government can and must do more to ensure that weapons made for our military do not take the lives of innocent civilians at home, and that our tax dollars do not subsidize crime and violence or otherwise perpetuate the epidemic of gun violence in America. We salute President Biden for the creation of the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, and we ask you to take appropriate action.
and you can pause it if you want to see the names of these attorneys general but rest assured they are all pieces of communist trash adjectives guys and gals adjectives they throw a couple adjectives in a letter make it sound all tear jerky and their hope is that it will cause Biden to once again stop the sale of rounds produced at Lake City
to the civilian market. Like 40%. Now I know people who work at that plant watch this channel and they typically converse back and forth with me. I think it's 40% of the civilian market of rounds, 5-5-6 rounds, come from that plant. So what they're saying, without saying it is, let's reduce the availability of these rounds in this country by 40%. That's exactly what they're saying.
This is going to do what you know to rounds if this ends up taking place. The cops are going to go crazy. And there will be people who say, stop talking, you're causing the ambulance to go up. Bullshit. I don't have that kind of power. What I'm doing is showing you exactly what 20 attorneys general just did in this letter to sell out all of the American citizens in their states.
Guys and gals, we need to reclaim this country. Pass this along. Many people don't know this. This happened yesterday. All people need to know this. We need to stop letting these communist pieces of trash obtain levels in office because we're too friggin' busy to take part in the process that was designed by our forefathers who died for this.
Get involved. Be part of the fix. Let's not perpetuate the problem. Guys and gals, let me know what you think about that down below. And if your attorney general's on here, you damn well better be reaching out regularly and pestering them with the truth. Until we see each other again, be safe, stay vigilant, and carry a gun to keep you, your friends, your family, your community safe. And yes, even in 556, although...
762 is pretty cool too. GNG 10 and CMMG save a ton of money. See you in the next one. Take care.
As Joe McNeil used to say, a case of beans and weenies on the front porch and a case of ammunition when the troops go by, our troops are militia. Being able to do that all over the country, people simultaneously, is what makes the difference. It's what will count.
So, again, recommendation number one, if you do not have an AR-15 and you are listening, buy the cheapest AR-15 you can afford to get you on the table. I know that there are some fantastic and beautifully built firearms, you don't have to tell me that, just like cars, but I can't afford a Ferrari and I could never afford a Cadillac. But I can't afford a Pontiac or Chevy, and I can buy one brand new. So, Bear Creek Arsenal, Palmetto State Armory, Del Taun,
anything Anderson, I don't care what it is. The idea is that that lower can be tapped to any upper you choose. Now the next thing is, after you get 1 AR 15, if you're just by yourself, if you're on your lonesome, then you're listening to me.
You may not be able to eat for a day or two every once in a while. Why? Because you need to spend your money and prioritize an arming up better. You don't need select fire. You do not need silencers. The people who choose to do that, fantastic. But you listening, you don't need to buy something that's labeled something else. You need a standard firearm that is a basic weapon.
Doesn't need a bunch of rails, doesn't need a bunch of extra do-dads. A regular AR-15 M4 knockoff is fine. Plastic foregrip, lighter weight, and it's in 5.56. Now, after you get that base gun, you can pop those two pins, and you can make it anything you want on the roof. You can even go out and buy the most expensive upper you can possibly imagine and pop, pop, put the pins back in place, and you got 50% of a Ferrari.
Well, it's not as good as... No, it's, you know, I agree. It's not the whole gun, but you can remember the upper is what does all the real work. Once your optic's around that upper, you can box that upper up, take it off, put it back on. It's right back to where it was. Boom, you're on site.
So here again after you've got that basic AR-15 you can go to Bear Creek Arsenly and go to Palmetto State Armory. You can go to Centerfire. They have Delcons typically on hand. Anderson's are floating around. Oh my God, Mark mentioned Anderson again. Guys, Anderson has been around longer than most all the other AR-15 companies out there. You ever think about that one? For all the piss-woolie nonsense and comments made about Anderson,
Back years ago, there are only three alternate manufacturers and Anderson was one of those three right from the get-go making a basic rifle. Was it something fancy? Did it have any special pattern head and squeeze on the ass doodads? No, not at all. And you know what? All those Andersons we built way back then from $70 upper, $70 lowers, that's what it used to cost, $70.70. And then you had to buy and find all the parts, but they were cheap back then.
There were M16A1 parts all over the place. You can buy a kit from Sarco for $76. Later it went up to $125 for everything except the lower receiver. That's a Colt plastic mark. Yeah, I know I've seen all the ads and now it's a $1,200 gun now, but parts, parts gun, you know that? Go look at apexgunparts.com. What does a complete Colt kit cost right now? If you buy a Colt Prancing Pony Vietnam era rifle kit.
Oh God, it's like you're selling your first born male child. Don't do that. Instead, we need as many weapons. We need to be up to speed. We need to be there now. So the next step is upper receivers. Go to Bear Creek, go to Palmetto, check out any of the other companies that make uppers with bolt carrier and charging handle or without, and you can do it in pieces so you can buy as you go because what you can afford. The first part is get a complete rifle. Now you're on the game.
Get the magazines, now you're ready to fight with the ammo and the mags and the gun. But, now we're gonna protract your ability to fight in the future. And to do that, we need four basic calibers. Your 5.56 is already covered. Get an upper in 7.62x39. Why? Cuz there's a whole pile of ammo out there for that. And Bear Creek Arsenal has some goodbyes on that particular solution. Again, don't worry about it being the fanciest, latest, greatest fill in the blank.
Look to see what they have on sale for the best price right now in a 16 inch barrel or 20 inch if you can. 16 inch right now is the gladiest of the day, so that's what you're going to find cheapest. Then, the next thing you want to do is get a 300 blackout. Why? Because it's a very effective, popular round and it can be built easily. People are making it. I know a lot of people here, more than I expected, I started talking about 300 blackout.
I've got five, six different guys that are building almost at manufacturer level, 300 blackout constantly every week. So they're building up their inventories because they like the round. So that's going to be out there. And then 450 Bushmaster. Why? Straight case built from another rifle case. Guess what? You can make them all day from junk brass or spare brass laying around. I wouldn't cannibalize a brand new round. I'd be using older stuff.
Okay, you also want dies for each of these you want dies for 5 5 6 you want dies for 300 blackout you want dies for 7 6 2 by 39 and you want dies for 450 Bushmaster Now to be quite honest the one that I here's my pecking order on that though Well 5 5 6 there's enough of that floating around that you're probably still be able to get that in most combat situations I would probably buy the 450 Bushmaster die first
I would then buy the 300 Blackout dies next. Then the 762 by 39, and it's a flip there, it's a flip. Whichever you choose as far as the ones in between, 30 caliber or 30 caliber, take your pick. And then I'd get a 556 set of whatever dies you can find quick, again, for the best price.
We need massive low end production or actually reproduction to bridge the first phase of this combat situation we're gonna be in with a long term war. The second part is small unit production all over the country at the local level producing cases, bullets, powder, primer.
Now, primers are the... Actually, to be quite honest, I'm not worried about powder because we've already got that pretty well perfected and we can put powder plants up that are small production powder plants and that would produce tonnage. But it's the primers that are going to be the toughest of the four base products. Okay? Just something to think about. Go ahead, call her. Jump in there.
Yeah, this is Tom. I'm just what I call. I'm a sportsman guy and they got a Plum Crazy Gen 2 RIA AS-15, semi-al-MAC 556 NATO, 223, Govington, 16 inch barrel, 30 plus point round for $380. If you're a member, it's $361. That's for a complete rifle though, correct? Yes.
Okay, with a plum crazy lower. For people who don't understand that, the plum crazy lowers are a polymer lower and mostly polymer parts depending upon it. This is a Gen 2, so probably the buffer tube is polymer the whole nine yards. They work, they're functional, they get you on the table. And it's like I said, eventually if you wanted to change out that plum crazy lower to another lower,
You know what, gun I bury, if I were gonna bury an AR-15, I bury it with a Plum Crazy Lower. Wanna know why? Less things that oxidize. Think about it, there's less on a Plum Crazy Lower. If I have to bury it, and I'm gonna make sure it's as dry as it can be, I'm gonna make sure it's a triple pack. But just in case, one neat thing about those Plum Crazy Lowers is there's a lot less that can oxidize.
Which means it's more likely that any metal on plastic parts, they're not going to have oxidation lockup issues. They might have to chip them apart here where they make contact with other metal parts. If something were compromised, and that's not a bad price for a complete rifle right now. So there's a solution. Again, is the Plum Crazy the top end? No, it's a Pontiac Chevy.
Works just fine. I know a lot of guys who have racks of them because we've caught them when they were super cheap. When they first came out in the introductory offer, remember they were like $80 for a plumb crazy gen two lower when they came out. Then once they had them out there, everybody started using them. The price started to creep up. So again, it's still an option to buy just that lower, by the way, from probably even Sportsman's Guide. They might even have it on the shelf. Just the lower.
That's an FFL item though, just as a complete weapon is an FFL item. Anything else, Tom? No, I was just going through Sportsman's Guide and happened to see that one, pass it on. I'm looking out for anything else. Very good, thank you. Again, real quick, over at Sportsman's Guide, since we touched that base, Sportsman's Guide has a deal slash clearance section and right now, you guys need to go page by page through the surplus clothing in the markdown section.
Now some of the stuff is at the tail end so you can figure it's mostly smaller sizes, but that's not true with everything over there. They have what I think is a Hungarian woodland camo pattern pant. It's in ripstop. So again, for the winter you're going to need more layers. You can use it as just a camo layer, but you're still going to need a lot of warm underneath. But I think it's 1145.
If you're a member, $11 for a pair of actual military fatigue pants that are supposed to be new inventory. They're over, and that's over in the deals slash clearance section.
And then Woodland and Woodland and Woodland. If you've got a Woodland camo unit out there, this is a way for you to get more pants, more clothing for all seasons. Yep, the winter stuff is going to sell cheap in the summer. The summer stuff sells cheap in the winter. Ripstop is typically a summer item.
Right now it's reasonably priced. So again, go check that out and that's sportsmansguide.com sportsmansguide.com Sportsmansguide.com now I have not been good about taking care of something else today We completed printing having printed up a bunch of the Mahdi Griffin 50 caliber manual rifle build manuals This is a complete document
It is 8.5x11 format. Do not try to change that because the spec sheets that are inside the book pertain to the parts for the Mardi Grifen and so their templates are also a way to test your cut. It's a $15 donation has to be. The price on the printing was about almost $12.
Copying has gone up not down now. We're gonna change that I hope I can shave a few dollars off because I'm gonna start burning out some of these brand-new in the box printers I have We'll see how many copies we can make per ink, you know ink pack But right now we choose go to www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com the numeral for
When you get there, go to the donate key and donate $15 that will cover the cost of the item and shipping. Shipping is approximately $3.60 per envelope to get it to you. So $15 is a, just covers the cost. That's all we're looking at. We just need to make sure we cover the cost.
You might want to add a dollar more because PayPal takes their chunk out of whatever it is that we use it when we use it. That's a personal flavor choice on your part. We just need to cover the cost so I can crank more out. And as soon as I can make it cheaper, we will. But for now, it's $15. So you go to www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Go to the donate key. Donate $15.
Put MG that will represent Maddy Griffin and I need a mailing address so I can send you the manual. You have to put that in the Notations section. Now, if you'd like to order it by mail, then grab an envelope, write PBN. That's Patriot Broadcasting Network, PBN. PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan 48130. That's PBN.
PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan 48130. You can use the mailing address as the return address that makes sure that it gets to us no matter what. It's going to be returned to us even though you sent it, see how that works? So you can use the return, the mailing address is also the return address. Now on the inside though, I need to slip a paper where you print
where you want the item shipped to, the book. It's a manual. It is a construction manual. In addition, put $15 in there and you can do it as cash and or you can do check our money order. If you do check our money order, make it out to Nancy. Last name K-O-E-R-N-K-E or you can leave it blank. It's up to you. That's K-O-E-R-N-K-E.
And again, we'll shoot it out as quickly as we get the response. And some of you should already have gotten yours in the mail, as a matter of fact, because we've already been pushing them, you know, torpedoes in the water. We also have packages on the way. Everybody was with the drawings. Watch your mailboxes or pay attention to your front porch. Some of these are long, a little longer than they are square, actually. More rectangle. You'll understand why when you open the box. Sure, pointy objects work that way. So again,
PBN PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan 48130. Wanna say hi, send a card. Also, you can do that. If you're listening by shortwave on 6.160, regular shortwave, drop us a postcard from your area and mail it to PBN, PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan 48130. We gotta put with you as we post those in the sound studio.
around the perimeter of the studio, the workstation. It's kind of cool. So we have some really neat flash to put in for people to see when they stop in and visit. It's kind of neat. And again, we appreciate the input we've already gotten from our friends out there. And we also want to say thank you to those donating that have made Shirtwave possible. We appreciate the fact that our
big anonymous donators, individuals who are supporters, people who have been listening since they were teenagers, who are now owning bigger companies and asked for this short wave hour to be put up and on air. So it's done. We appreciate that. Thank you. And again, also...
Somebody's asking, you can buy air 15s wherever you want. I've been mentioning Bear Creek. Bear Creek does not advertise with us. If you want to mention that, say hi to them if you're gonna talk to them. Mention that, yeah, you get to hear about Bear Creek on Liberty Tree Radio. As a matter of fact, that won't hurt. But again, Palmetto and Bear Creek, they do their own thing. They're just doing the right thing. So we're mentioning them.
And again, both of them have multiple chambering slash upper receiver packages. You don't have to buy the whole gun and there's no paperwork on the upper receiver. So I suggest you buy them now as quick as you can. Get the four basics. And if you want to add more, there's all kinds. There's 6.5 Creedmoor out there. There's a couple other wilders that are out there too. Well, there's 223 Wild, but that's the 556-223 Compromise.
And that's, for anybody that's confused about that, it's supposed to be the proper chambering and dimension to help work with either factory 223 or military 556. Okay, that's when you see that 223 wild. So that is something I haven't talked about in a bit. It's not a significant issue or problem, but a lot of people prefer the 223 wild for the sake of guaranteeing
copacetic operation because of all the different ammo's that are out there and the different countries that make ammunition. So that way it's more likely your AR will digest everything you might run into when you say throw me a mag. Okay. Another thing as I mentioned yesterday, if you're going to buy a bunch of these different chamberings, grab a handful of 20 round magazines.
The neat thing is with 20s, why would I, well Mark, why don't you just use a 30 and only put so many rounds in. Well, here's the thing, is that the 20 rounders are a straight line.
They don't paper and you will need a more of an extreme taper, for instance, like with 7.62x39. But you're not going to load 30 rounds or even 20 rounds into any of these magazines. The idea is to load what is sufficient to allow for operation so that you can continue to function. And I like the 20 rounders because they're more like a, let's put it this way. Let's say maybe you had a handful of 5.56 left, a few mags left, but you've acquired some 7.62x39.
You put the 7.62x39 either into the more dramatic banana mags if you have them, and they're not too expensive. They're not really expensive at all if you find them. But if you use 20 rounders, you can identify that other ammunition because of the size of the magazine. So you can keep the apples and oranges separate. See how that works?
It's an idea because as you move across the battlefield scavenge whatever you can carry away whatever you can in fact our policy is to strip the enemy bare-ass naked boots socks and we use their dirty underpants after they've been scrubbed and washed and bleached and whatever we'll chop them up and use them for gun cleaning rags now or just maybe not chop them up and we're gonna use them as is go ahead jump in there Tom we're almost to the top
Because you can't call timeout and say you've dropped the wrong aiming issue for the wrong gun like they did on that one movie the survivors and survivors Yeah, yeah I broke the wrong animal. What? Yeah, I brought the wrong animal. Okay. Sure time. Okay. I'll tell you what can I
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