May 28, 2024
Evening Show
Complete
Radio Episode
2024
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Summary
Mark Koernke discussed food preservation and preparedness strategies, including canning, freeze-drying, and smoking meats, with detailed advice on sourcing affordable MREs and shelf-stable food alternatives from retailers like Dollar Tree and Walmart. He addressed reports of FEMA command trailers and black helicopter activity in Michigan and Oklahoma, analyzing their deployment patterns and implications. The show covered Second Amendment issues, including a Ninth Circuit Court ruling on felon gun ownership rights, and discussed communications systems for civil defense, emphasizing the balance between signal strength and operational security in various threat scenarios.
- food preservation
- canning
- freeze-drying
- MREs
- preparedness
- FEMA
- black helicopters
- Michigan
- Oklahoma City
- second amendment
- felon gun rights
- ninth circuit court
- communications
- radio operations
- civil defense
- Ukraine
- biological weapons labs
Transcript
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the early part of 1993 when we set up Republic Radio International. The tape showed up. I was on cassette back in the day and we plugged it in and we had tile floors in the two-story building that Republic Radio's office was in in Pontiac, Michigan at the time. And as it played, the place got quiet. Everybody stopped and everybody was listening. And it's the first time all of us had heard it and I listened to it and at the end of it,
I said, guys, that's the theme for the intelligence report from this point forward. And every hour that we start the hour, we will play this for as long as we are ever on the air. And Thelen Polk is the author. The state patrolman remains anonymous for obvious reasons, but he did his part and he said a message. He said, Mark, you can do anything you want with it.
And of course, he probably was thinking he'd just play it once and that would be it. It's like, no, no, no, no, no. What's fascinating about Visitor from the Past is the checklist there. Everybody goes, well, that's today. What do you think? This is new. Think all this is, any of this is new. There's nothing you're seeing that's new. It's just more overt. Every once in a while, your enemy gets arrogant and it's more overt and in your face.
and they go for the golden ring. And that's what they're doing right now. You're at war. Act like it. Remember, going to war in 24. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the second 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.
East, Northwest, South, and East. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. LibertyTreeRadio.org.
We're on satellite. We'll see. Hi to all our merchant marine operators out there. You're the guys that make that happen, both just listening in on KU, on C, and the satellite phone around the planet. Analog and digital, we use everything. You guys use everything. I should say we could hear, but you guys are the ones making this happen.
And in addition to that, of course, we're in a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside of the United States. I want to say hi to all our listeners in Slovakia and also in Estonia right now. And I know we have some friends listening in Poland too because they just got their plot there and their military service people. So for everybody out there listening, guys, watch your back.
You know you're going to get back to have by the globalist slash the small hat wearers you do know that right? anyway It's Tuesday communications Tuesday. It is the 14th of
May, that means this is the end of the second full week of May. And the Soviet May window, of course, May Day Glories. You have to have that nose up in the air, air head cocked on the side, and doing the goose step. Yeah, whatever. Anyway, 16th year, though, of open. Obvious.
And in your face, Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K. 2024, old earth calendar? Give it all she's got, Captain. And 2024, Battle for the Republic, book one, The Dance of Swords. It's how it began.
And we got the rain. I had a chance to step up, look outside. It was over there, it was over there, it was over to the east. And finally, in one little downpour, it went, boom, right here. And then it backed off. So now it's over there and over to the west again.
So, we'll see. This is probably going to be a squall classic Michigan spring weather, which is what it is. Biggest problem is keeping up with the grass this year because everything is kicking off. Another thing real quick, we are going to have a phenomenal pit and general tree fruit season. The blooms were massive. The biggest problem with this is that actually the trees get overboard.
The more experienced fruit growers know to go out, they actually make a little tool. They have to make one because they don't make it industrially. And what you do is you snip off every fourth bloom or so. Yes, it's ridiculously tedious work. But...
You still get fantastic production. It's just that if you get really really really fantastic production the veritable weight of the fruit will break the branches and this has happened this last year was really a big fruit production year. Nobody want to talk about it or I should they don't give it any credit. Michigan is really notorious for plums, peaches, apricots, needless to say everybody grows pears. Pears are the foundation fruit for all canning if you don't know that.
And we have a massive cherry production here too. Well, they all look good. So we are going to be going to town on the canning and the other thing is freeze drying this year. So we're going to be doing conventional mason jar. We're going to probably take advantage of a cannery that we know is still online quietly that's one of ours, so to speak. It's actually used by a church.
And in addition to that, we're going to do freeze dry. That'll be mylar packing. Although you can do freeze dry and use...
mason jars or other jars to seal up the product. I prefer a combination, but if we have a surf yet, if we have an excess of, or like a quantity and over beyond everything else we're doing, then we might use the mason jars, but I don't think so. I think we're going to need those for all of the other product that's going to be out there. And we're using up what we can from the past several years so that we've opened up more of the containers and have them ready to go.
And you should be taking advantage of that too. And don't forget also drying, just conventional drying fruits. God, I love mangoes, apricots, and pears. Just if you do your own pears and you dry them, it's amazing how much better they taste. Just, you know, again, the product itself and the process.
So just a heads up, experiment, do that. Get a food dryer this year or make your own smoker, et cetera, et cetera. On the list of things I'd love to get done would be a smokehouse. Actually, I have a smokehouse set up. They're not hard. It's not difficult, but they do require tending. You got to make sure that the smoke is readily available and the fire is tended to. So it's not hard, but it's something that's a constant. When you have things like that that you set up, they also require attention.
And you have to have people pitching in so that no matter what, the schedule is kept for maintaining the operation so you don't lose product. But smokehouses, best way to store meats that you could possibly imagine, and anything that's a meat can be smoked. Just as a heads up. Fish, possum, raccoon, duck, chicken, take your pick, whatever it is. But, you know, possum, yeah, well, I've had possum before. And trust me, if you know what you're doing,
Yeah, well of course everybody else is going yeah, no it's actually pretty good. Don't forget woodchuck also We're not gonna be wasting this food when the time comes everybody else turn the nose up I don't have a problem with that at least I'll still be eating Everybody else oh well Say la vie So another thing here real quick on that note I had several questions all those communications Tuesday about well again resource for MREs There's really much out there There is a bunch of
Well, yes, but the skunk you have to use waste. I won't say waste remember you have to use the tomato juice to process this the little epiphy Yeah, it's everybody was wonders to on that when you brought up skunk Tom Everybody always wonders how can you make a skunk skin hat that used to be a big thing back in the day to make skunk skin hats red or raccoon hats
Tomato juice is the secret. Most of you probably don't know it. Well, I've canned a lot of, I've canned hides, every kind of hide you can imagine. And what's interesting is, again, I didn't know this, but my uncle was notorious for making skunk-skinned hats. And he'd do road kills. He'd just grab something that was dead, you know, wasn't hard. It can't be rotted, but during the winter, how does it rot, right? But anyway, he'd tan the hide, but to do that, you soak it in tomato juice.
In fact, you soak it, then you dump it, then you soak it. It's kind of like when you're pulling the canic acid out of acorns when you cook them. You can eat acorns, but you have to wash them. You want to boil them, dump it, wash them again, boil them, dump it, wash them again. Yeah, it's tedious, but you end up with usable food. And then this old Indian recipe, the old Indian technique, for everybody who doesn't know, hopefully we're helping you learn things here.
Of course, where are you going to get tomato juice? I mean, down the road. I mean, you can. Everybody grows stuff. We're going to be growing vegetables. We already do. And in fact, that's the next thing going out are the tomatoes this week. But just something to think about. Your processes, learn things. That way you'll know what to do when the pepi le piu is available for the processing of more juice. So another thing here real quick, again, on the MREs.
before I go too far from that. The MREs pretty much, the little clutches that are out there are only so many pallets. And it's like we've said, if everybody takes an interest, which everybody is, what has happened is Sherman's march through the supply system has taken place.
Now, yes, you can find MREs. Usually people who are, again, they've purchased the stuff that was cheap and they've jacked the price on it. Oh, well, this is a capitalist system. And yes, they are profiteering, which of course is something we've talked about for 30 years. This is why we try to find the niches and the cheap places so that you can save money there and afford all the other stuff that really, really, really you can only buy from a handful of sources. Now, freestride is a great choice.
But it's out of most people's price range. MREs, the SOPACOs are, SOPACO is the company that's doing, I would say what, 80% if not 90% of the contracts you've seen. The SOPACO cases can be as little as 10 to a case for meals.
12 to a case. Yes, they have 14, so I haven't seen any of those in a while. And the best deal are 16 meals to the case, and yet the price still is pretty much the same. Now, interestingly enough, these are full meals. We bought out two companies before that had the 16 meal packs. In fact, that was the first thing I... Hey, wait a minute. Did I read that right?
But SOPACO in bulk quantity is randomly popping up here and there. Why? Well, the Gov Liquidation sells a certain amount of the SOPACO on a regular basis. If you look, you'll find Iron Planet. Go look at Iron Planet. That's the rent a contractor that runs Gov Liquidation now.
And if you pay attention at the end of each of their auctions, there's typically pallets, one pallet per lot of SOPACO MREs. Now, you're going to have to look at the specs to see which case slot it is.
The other thing is are the humanitarian rations, which is the last batch of stuff that we picked up. Now remember, the humanitarian rations do not have meat in them, but they are protein-based. So you have a number of different, typically Indian or far Eastern cuisine main courses. I don't have any problem with them at all. They've all been great. I actually like them because it's another variety.
What would I do if I was issuing out the SOPACO humanitarian rations? Oh, I grab a can of Spam or a can of chicken or a can of something and throw that at you. Congratulations. Now, why would I give you a can like that? Well, remember that the humanitarian rations are not single meals. Okay, so if you see the humanitarian rations, read what it says.
What they issue in the pouch are all the calories you need for the equivalent to all basically three meals of the day or the calorie equipment a calorie Content necessary to sustain a person for one day So you get you have to figure out how you're going to eat what you got in the pouch because you do get multiples
Now, to make it that much tastier for the price of a Dollar Tree can of sardines or whatever, or whatever deal you can make, there's pouches. Like I said, we've seen a number of different beef pouches pop up out there that are in the Dollar Tree, but also at most of the other food stores that are available. The prices vary.
But you give a person one meat pouch and then one of these sustainment pouches is good for a day, you're eating like a king. And whatever else you happen to tag and throw in there makes it that much better. So the SOPACO, the last place that had them, which I think is out, but in the last place it was commonly available, there's a bunch of other lesser locations, is over at apexgunparts.com.
Now, they may have some individual cases left, but I don't think they have pallets. And we have purchased pallets from that location. And so, again, it didn't take long to buy them out. Last time I checked, they had had 11 pallets. Somebody came in and bought a bunch of them, and I think that evacuated them with the exception of a parcel pallet that they were selling as individual case lot. So you'll have to check that out. If they have anything, they might have restocked. I heard a voice maybe. Do you have a caller? Shelby from Oklahoma City. Go ahead, Jimmy.
Also, if you have a Mexican grocery store in your city, go there and they should have red refried beans in a pouch. It's over almost two pounds of refried beans in a pouch that's shelf stable for almost two years. It's in a Mylar sealed pouch. So it's about two pounds of refried beans in a pouch.
Definitely a good enough to be people. I stick to people depending on how much they like refried beans. But that's a good option. Of course, also you mentioned the the herfords beef pouch, which it's done or it's packaged. The one I saw was packaged in Brazil, but it's put out by like you said, Mark. So I don't tooling down there in Brazil like a packing plant.
packages up in the Mylar pouches like the MRE pouches. They are a kind of a yellow with a blue labeling. This is Hereford on the very top. You can find them at Walmart. They're around two, about two to three dollars, I believe, a pouch.
Obviously you said you found them at Dollar Tree, which would be much cheaper. I haven't checked my local Dollar Trees here, so to find out. Because I did check the website and I couldn't find them on their website, so it could be just a random thing that they only have so many of them to sell off. Right. It could be regional. It's possible. Go ahead. Also, I have brought up in the past, since I tried my food, there is the NOR, K-N-O-R-R, rice.
It's kind of a green package. It's at most stores. Grocer's pretty much every grocery store. These are just rice pack. They got Spanish rice. They got like fried rice, different rice varieties. I think they have some other soups or whatever, but they're just simple boys, you know, dumping off a pot of water and boil. Like that. I really like the Spanish rice and then add some lime juice that I've mentioned. There's a company called True Lemon.
There's the name of the company and they sell crystallized lemon and crystallized lime packets. They come in a box about 20 or 25. Their 8-inch end of the pack is equal to one wedge of lemon or lime. And now if you have a local gas station, either loves or on cue.
Check over in their drink section where you get your coffee and stuff where they have like the sugars and creamers and they should have the lemon packet. So if you want to try some of these for free or get a handful of them, you may find out you might like them for your lemon water, whatever. But if they shelf stable lemon form that's crystallized lemon, like I said, you can like that loves or on cue that I know of. You could check some of your other gas station. They may have this on hand by your drink area.
where you have the, like I said, the dairy creamer and sugar and whatnot for coffee. They should have those over there if they do. So you can at least try the lemon part, but you can get it at Walmart over in the baking section where they have the sugar and brown sugar and stuff. It's in a box. Both of them are right next to each other, the lemon and the lime. But it tells you on the box what to just add a little bit of water to make some lemon juice or lime juice.
equals so many tablespoons or whatever of juice when you mix it with water. But like I said, I like the rice with the lime juice. Also, Walmart also has the little pouches of meat. They have like fajita chicken pouch, they're about $1.50 a pouch. But not for one meal. I think they're like 250 calories, roughly, or 150 I can't remember.
But add that to your your nor Spanish rice and it's really good like so they also have Barbecue pulled pork it's in bar. It's our shredded barbecue pork with the barbecue sauce in the same size pouch and I tried that and it's actually really good versus the the Dollar General brand that has the barbecue
The barbecue doesn't taste that great. So, I mean, it could be a preference, something we may like, but I didn't really care for it. So, the Walmart one tasted a little bit better, at least on the barbecue side, but they do have those in their canned meat section at Walmart. I said you can get that and kind of put together some meals and stuff that are, if you can't find any MRE, you can, most of this stuff is shelf-stable for at least a couple of years.
Maybe I would say probably max five years, but it could go past that if you keep them decently stored. You know, just, just your mild may vary. Just do the sniff test and taste test. And if it's not bloated, you should be okay on stuff. Same thing goes for canned food. As long as you do check, keep an eye out, you know, if it's late past the best by date.
But those are just some ideas, Mark, since you were talking about MREs and whatnot. Absolutely. We know it real quick, Dall. Have an update on the stuff when you get done. Real quick, the MR... Okay, with Hereford, we had at the Dollar Tree locally, they had three of the trays show up with it, and it was the crumbled beef.
So $1.25, because that's the price at $1.25 now. And like you said, grab a pack of rice. Now the meat products have all been in the foil Mylar military retort pouch. You'll notice the rice products they're doing in a plastic retort pouch.
So again, shelf life on those, throw the dice like you said, but if you put them in a climate control underground location, they should be good for far, far, far beyond what is considered to be the use by date. The big thing here again is pay attention to when you picked them up and mark everything or tag it on the shelf so that you know what you've got to use first. Go ahead, jump in there.
I think the Nor rice is kind of in a foil pouch, not necessarily the Mylar, but kind of a paper foil type pouch or plastic. So a little bit better than just straight up plastic versus some other stuff. So it's a little bit better design pouch. Also, talking about food, there's also the Bear, I think it's Bear Creek since.
They were pretty much just add water type soups. They have different types of soups. Some of them may have to add an ingredient or two. But for the most part, there's Bear Creek. And then I can't remember. I think it's called Shoreville. And you can find them on sale sometimes for about, well, it used to be about $1.50. Two bucks, I think. Throwing things off in the round between $2 to $4 a pound.
Oh, we're losing you a little bit. You've gone a little soft. There we go. That's better. One, two, three. One of the things again here is you figure if you have three items, I've noticed what I've been watching.
Some of the write-ups people are doing on YouTube. They're doing videos, forgive me, talking about the field rations from overseas. And I was kind of laughing, I was laughing a little bit because, well, I really like the fruit and it's interesting. The Americans, we have a greater variety, but not necessarily as exciting a meal. But we have a greater variety of what's in the meal, whereas the Russians, for instance, or the Poles or the French,
do some really interesting cuisine as far as the quality of the product. Once you know how to process it and make it work, in other words, is there something in addition you might want to do that isn't on the instruction, the rations are actually pretty decent. But one of the things that typically is missing is a dessert-type item.
That's what you would rate it as, okay? We get goodies all the time. So here's a little trick too. If you, you know, for instance, I want to put a bigger MRE than I would actually get. You grab one of the Hereford pouches of beef. You grab any one of the rice packs that are precooked, ready to go, and there's a dozen different ones, even at the Dollar Tree now. Or you can do the Coors. But if you want to do it so it's all cooked, ready, out of the pouch, done, finished, ready to go.
Grab a fruit can now. Here's the thing I've noticed that they've got back at Dollar Tree is Canned cherry and canned apple pie filling That's your snack item now You can get apricots in season depending on where you are in the country and the apricots are in cans mark Yeah, but apricots are still kind of seasonal as far as when they show up because they're one of those pit fruits
that is very unique and very popular if it's available. I love apricots. I think that's an excellent choice to throw in the mix. But any one of these gives you a main course with a protein and carbohydrate.
You've got some sugars thrown in there. Don't forget a little bit of coffee or something in a whatever your choice of beverage is in a powdered product. You can throw water on it and congratulations you got something colored to drink. Notice I didn't say flavored, I said colored.
But the idea is that you can, for a very reasonable price, put a nice ration together that's as good as what you'd normally be seeing in the military packs. Now, the little trinket items are where you catch up, you know, and if you pay attention, a piece of hard candy or, again, an interdental stimulator, you know, toothpick, that's what the government used to call them, interdental stimulators. Yes, a big long, yeah, that was the title.
But, for instance, a couple of little chicklet chewing gum items. What's that for? To help clean the teeth and, you know, deal with the breath. Not that that's a big problem. I don't think you're going to be getting that close to everybody out there in the field. We never did. But it's the idea that these are all items that are helped to balance out the overall pack. And you'll notice I said something.
The coffees are diar is a diuretic everything that's in a military pouch or military kit if you follow their pattern each one complements the other one of the most common complaints of being on a sea ration or a pack a can pack diet
is a tickerpick pouch or can, is the fact that eventually a lot of people get kind of bound up, mostly because they don't take in enough moisture. So part of dealing with that was to incorporate coffee and Cocos into all, for instance, of the old sea rations, although before that, they had the Ks and all the sea rats and variants of World War II. And there's plenty of examples where people are surveying these now, even though they're way outdated.
and showing you what they were issuing. The C-rations were an excellent solution. Of course, they were in the can period. Now we're into the pouch window for packaging. Although, if you're going to go to like the store we're talking about, half of what we just discussed can be bought in the can. If I were dealing with taking it into the field, I'd look for one of my deciding factors with cans would be picking items that have a zip can top.
only because of convenience and reducing time and handling. Now, the problem with Ziploc cans for storage, you know, the pull can tabs, is that that tab point where the can is weakened so you can do it, is a weak point for long-term storage. Always remember that. So my long-term storage, if I, you know, well, not if, my can storage, if I were having to husband down the road,
The first cans that get used, one of the priorities is anything that's a Ziploc lid, I already know from long-term storage experience that those are less stable. So if I was cherry picking to say send a couple of people out or a patrol out for or say sending a unit out to fight and I'm cherry picking, pardon the pun, off of my kit. For instance, the cherry pie filling is a Ziplid, the apple pie filling, the latest ones are Ziplids.
There's soups, there's other, that's what you're going to get. But you've got those others there. Yes, I know, but these are priority and those have a longer storage life. Provided we don't have to, you know, throw more people into the mix with regard to consumption, those will be here longer. And it's the same with freeze dried food. I know everybody wants to grab freeze dried food, but if you do, don't use that in the early stages of operations. Why?
because the freeze-dried food has the longest shelf life. It's indefinite. We don't really know how long you can store freeze-dried food, but freeze-dried food has an indefinite window of usability. So it's the last thing you want to use if you're consuming out of your, you know, larder.
Now, I might choose it for hoplite operators. If I got somebody who's running as a courier, I might give them a combination of ration packs of whatever kind and, say, freeze-dried. Lightweight, minimize weight. They can acquire water along the way. That's what a water straw is for or what a purifier is for, a little field purifier, et cetera. You figure out what works. And congratulations, you're gone.
Move fast move swiftly young messenger. It's your job, but cut cut cut So again solutions not just complaining about the problems and you the MREs are Fewer and far between but what is out there was cheaper but there are people who have been acquiring them and then now they're flipping them and That's you that's the other competition you have going
There are a couple of freeze dried source companies out there, not just WISE, there's a couple of companies that have good contacts with the Donut of Destruction, the DOD, and because they have that in, they're primary carriers for all of the bizarre and exotic freeze dried foods that are for submarine service. And they're fantastic, I mean the menu is insane.
the stuff that's in there in freeze-dried purchase for the government. You've got lobster tails, you got Philly magnet, you know, filet mignon. Oh, mon d'ouille, I'm going to be a French cook when I'm in the field. Wait a minute, give me that mark one piss pot. Yeah, I gotta have a big pot, big can for this one.
But there's a lot of stuff like that out there. However, I would point out you're paying government Surplus prices in the 21st century planet crappoo So the prices are not what they used to be. They are much crazier That's all there is to it. So this is where we're looking for alternate solutions And yes, if all else fails rice and beans people Rice and beans and a can of something. I'll tell you what rice and beans and a can of sardines
Well, it's not very exciting. Nope, but it fills the gut. It provides the combination of proteins, carbohydrates, and amino acids that you need. And by the way, you get some fish oil with the sardines. And you can get them in mustard. You can get them in tomato sauce. You can get them in oil. You can get them in water. Take your pick. Mix it up. That way you have a little bit of change up in menu. That's a good thing. But if all else fails, buy a palate of cheapest mackerel, buy a palate of rice, and a palate of beans.
And you know what? You're eating pretty stinking good, better than most of the planet. I said palate. I know guys that that's what they did for their two-year supply. They walk out, had sources, palate of mackerel, palate of beans, palate of rice. And the rice was Asian rice. So very different from the dry land flat rice that we have. Well, we have both. But mostly we have dry land rice. So just heads up on that one.
We are 15 minutes out from the top. It is Communications Tuesday. We've been talking about everything else, but if we don't keep you alive and we don't keep you eating, you're not going to be talking to anybody in any radios. Go ahead, jump in there, caller. I'll go over it again like I did in the last hour. So I spotted this 4.19 central time here in Oklahoma City. This is at the NBC Suites.
The address is going to be 1815 South Meridian here in Oklahoma City. It's just about two miles north of the World Airport, Will Rogers Airport. There's like about 50 hotels over in this area, so hotel area. But it's on the intersection of Southwest 15th and Meridian. It's going to be on the southwest corner of that intersection. I saw
FEMA command trailer set up in the parking lot on the north side of the hotel which faces 15th Street. It had the two expansion sides that expand out to give more room on the inside were expanded out. It had the communications satellite dish set up on top along with their dish network TV.
There's a generator that is parked trailer parked behind the RV. It is set up with the wires attached to hook it up to the trailer. Of course the RV, the command RV, says female on the side in big letters, so you can't miss it. There was three white work trucks. They're Ford super duty trucks. I'll have to look at my pictures a little bit more closely, but two of them had
heavy-duty bumpers with the winches on the front and the other one did not, but they have the box trailer or box in work trailer where they have the access panels on the side and it's one enclosed truck bed, all one package with the open two doors in the back to store stuff in the middle with the, like I said, the access boxes on either side.
Also Mark, I did drive through the park block. There was a fourth vehicle. There was a white GMC four-door, I'm not sure, Yukon, similar SUV parked right across, right over there by it that I didn't see earlier. It had the little round white box, I believe, was either some sort of satellite communication, like a smaller type communication or tracking.
along with a smaller antenna or whatever for mobile radio or whatever that they have. It wasn't a dome type thing. It was more of a rectangle, square box, probably about two inches high, probably about six inches diameter, some type of communications antenna and a closed box on top of the white SUV. Next to the generator that had the wires shifted to the trailer was just another
medium small box trailer parked right next to it. And let's say in, like I said, I mentioned before, the only disaster sites that are going on would have to tornadoes two weeks ago and then one a week ago. But all these locations are over an hour's drive. One is over two hours drive from Oklahoma City Metro area. Like I said, the two hour one is up more towards Tulsa.
all these areas that have some tornado damage that possibly FEMA would go to for way over an hour, almost two hours away in different directions. So it doesn't really make sense that they would set up here in Oklahoma City. So just a heads up for anybody who lives in Oklahoma City surrounding area. Like I said, this was in Oklahoma City, the NBC Suites. The address was 1815 South Meridian.
It's at the intersection of Southwest 15th and Meridian. It's going to be on the southwest corner of that intersection. And you can see the trailer and the three pickup trucks if you just drive down 15th Street without even driving through the parking lot. And like I said, they have the command trailer with the three pickup trucks set up and deployed. And like I said, I saw this an hour ago when I first saw it. And I always said about 20 minutes ago, I drove back through there.
and got some video and I'll post some pictures on the Gilded page under the news section since the general chat doesn't have pictures access. So I'll post it under the news section with the pictures and whatnot. Unless you have any questions. Sure. Very good. And again, thank you for the follow up too.
Basically, what I've described before, remember, is you have a core element and you have assigned support vehicles that are either, in this case, if they're the truck's maintenance or deployment for material support, and then you have another courier vehicle, which is what the Yukon is, slash, once you plop your arse down wherever you're located, you don't move the whole command post.
You know, debark if it's a trailer or you park the CP if it's a mobile home type construction and then use the support vehicles for all your local duty work, whatever you're doing. So this is a pod deployment of some kind.
And there may be more vehicles attached than just the one at UConn, it's as likely as not, but usually you see a small little fleet support detail. This is kind of like what I've talked about with building a hospital unit. You know, you have three trucks, three trailers, or in this case, forgive me, three ambulances.
Three trailers and then you still have a an actual ambulance transport which are trucks or vans separate from the ambulance which is pressed into service as a Aid station, but you also want a handful of other support vehicles because all the rest of this equipment is specialized So you need something to assign and and and attach to those formations. That's what they're doing here Do we have another caller?
Yeah, go ahead. You with me? Hear me? We got you. Okay. I kind of changed subject. I look, would you say, I'm of the opinion that when you look at what's going on with Ukraine, is this democracy and this Democratic Party and this NATO, are they at war with Ukraine?
Ukrainian people. I saw this video, this woman crying out, this Ukrainian woman crying about her husband just got kidnapped. Kidnapped to go into a war, it was certainly going to end up dead. I mean, who does democracy? We look at the Democratic Party and they say, who do they have for friends? Who are their friends?
I can't, I think they're isolated like we got a government of people that hate everybody. I mean, I can't find, I'm trying to find a friend. I'm trying to find a friend, except for the, except for the homos. I can't see any friends they have. I mean, they say they're fighting. I think they're trying to, I've all been out of their pen for a long time, right off the bat.
they're trying to kill off this, this, this, uh, this Zikzak, Zikzak Shamir they have for president of Ukraine is trying to kill off the Ukrainian people. Tried to fill off the Christian population, which is what he's doing. Interestingly enough, this is the same. To me, this is the same routine that they did with the holodrama.
back before World War II. The Ukrainian population took a massive hit. Now the Jewish population stood by and watched. People don't realize the contest here. The argument is that the Ukraine is actually part of the old Khazarian empire. Now for anybody who says that, now here's, well, hold on. Here's something that's interesting. It came out of all their propaganda.
Does everybody understand where like 90% of the matzas for the Jewish population in the world are made? Matzas, it's a stupid thing. It's cardboard without salt. They're crackers, right? Yes, there's only one place in the world they're mostly made. Where is that? The Ukraine. I didn't know that.
Matzas are plopped all over the country here Kroger sells admirer sells and when the time comes when you're gonna buy the gavilta fish You got to get the matzas. Okay. Well the matzas if you notice mostly are not made here and Even for you. So now why is it that Ukraine has this special niche? Because remember that's a religious component. So there is something about the location
with regard to the Jewish International Congress, which most people don't know exists, but it's there. If you want to find out more about everything that Uncle Mark talks about, go to the Encyclopedia Judaicae, which is built and produced by the Jewish International Congress and the rabbinical council.
If you read the Encyclopedia Judaicae, when they tell you that, oh, that's a fiction that the Cazarian Empire doesn't exist, well, you're going to find out when you go to the Encyclopedia Judaicae, which is a reference construction by the rabbis, that they brag and talk extensively about the Cazar Empire and the Cazarians. Okay?
And interestingly enough, why would an obscure country, which was mostly occupied by the Communists for what, 60 years? 60 going on 70? What year did the Bolshevik Revolution take place? What year did the holodrama in the Ukraine take place? Go look at it. That's back in the 20s.
And yet, even up to 1990, when the wall fell supposedly, you know, when international communism advanced to the English Channel, during that whole time, motses were being produced in the Ukraine for export expressly all over the world for the Jewish population. How does that work? Now, I know why, but... Mots of green is people!
Yeah, well, yeah, Matzah. But what's interesting, remember, okay, why only that location? See, ask basic questions, guys. Think about it. There's a million other places. You've got Jewish bakeries. There's some that produce Matzah in the U.S. But they're very specific because, needless to say, if it's kosher, it's got to be blessed by the rabbi. But why is it that the lions share
of the matzahs used for the whole world for the Jewish population, which is a big minority. They're a tiny minority, okay, but they're matter all over the world. How were they able to continue to operate for that whole time inside the Ukraine and export nonstop, unhindered? They had the best access to dead bodies. Yeah, well, because they're the ones who were in charge. That's why. And that's what we need to focus on.
Do you think the world Jewry is conspiring to go to return back to? What is that? They're gonna go back. They're gonna go back. What what is you what was Ukraine after all the Ukrainians are dead? Well, actually okay if 600,000 Christian Orthodox Ukrainians are dead
Then they've taken out an entire generation and then another generation of Ukrainians granted there's refugees all over Europe and a bunch of them ran here But and those are the ones who can't get drafted because there's an ocean between them But remember they've even been grabbing people in Eastern Poland
and dragging them back to the front to die. The cemeteries are full. Well, what did this do? In a very short period of time, this is what is called with old royalty a corretment. Look up the word, corretment. What is a corretment? It's where the kosher mafia or the monarch is working for the kosher mafia, eradicate the local population for replacement.
Right now. Yeah. Well, that's what they're doing. Yeah, the replacement. I can smell the replacement. Yeah, I knew that was a card. Somebody's getting replaced for somebody else.
It's the stench of the battlefield that you're smelling and the stench of the battlefield. Remember, if there's 600,000 dead in less than... This is... The Democrat already likes that one. I think the Democrat already likes that one. I think NATO likes that one too.
Yeah, but okay Democrats the Democrats aren't the only ones involved in this because there's a whole bunch of Republic rats Who are so far up the Israeli's ash you couldn't pull their head out with a crowbar if their life depended on you And those characters if you notice they're all as a block in this garbage. Why well, let's just say Epstein's the one you know about But guys I said this before do you think Epstein was the only blackmail operation running in Washington?
When I served in Washington at different times, and I'm going to tell you the Sheraton Hotel, I was in the Sheraton Hotel. It was completely restricted at that time. And not long before, Spiro T. Agnew had the whole, I think it would be the Eastern, it's like a corn cob, okay, the Eastern wing. The Vice President always used to have to find a place to live. So the Sheraton was restricted at the time. This is after Agnew though.
And yet, here we are in the bathroom. There's like about 15 urinals and there's just as many toilet stalls and there's a nice line of sinks and there's a valet there with the towel routine. And in comes this guy that looks like Aquilung. I'm serious, you look like he like from Jefferotels, you look like the guy. Not dripping down his nose.
Yes, he comes shuffling in and nobody stops him. He had to get into the building. What does he do? He's going while you're even while you're trying to use the toilet while using the urinal. He walks up and he puts a prostitute shop business card a color back in the day. This is big money. There's a picture of a couple of horrors.
And it's a business card and he's putting them at every urinal. Now the guy that doesn't stop him that's holding the towels that's supposed to keep people in the roof half out, right? Oh no, he's regular business. And he puts a couple cards at every one of the sinks and then he even slides, you know, goes into the stalls that don't have somebody sitting and taking a dump and puts a card on every toilet and then leaves the room, walks right out and obviously went to another bathroom somewhere else in the place and does it again.
Now, what was that? Well, that's part of the many clandestine spook and kook operations that are putting their business card out there. Now, if you're stupid enough to take that card, stupid enough to call that number, and stupid enough to go there, then you are just waiting to be laced by the blackmail ring one way or another, because one thing leads to another. One lures you into the other.
And Washington, D.C. is nothing but a cesspool of spook and kooks in layers one over the other. Literally, you know, Boris and Natasha. Everybody's blackmailed the do-evil. Every, all of these characters. Nobody's claimed. There are no, there are no queens. You know, what we look at...
When there are no clean, I said, look in World War II, scrape the thing clean. Paris, forget Paris. Forget Paris and start with a new capital and a new location. That's the type of stuff you're looking at. The capital of the United States would be better off in some
Some other city. In the middle of the ocean, no, no, no, no, no, the middle of the ocean and straight down three miles. That's where it would be best put it put right now. Because it's nothing but a cesspool that cannot be fixed. Hold on real quick. Let's go back to Ukraine. A couple of the things. Anybody forget we had like 20 plus biological weapons labs? Who do you think was running those? Do you think that we were running them guys? We weren't running those things there. The Israelis were.
When they captured a bunch of these characters they were shipped back, you know again some were traded back to Israel What does that tell you about what they've been doing with you frame? And remember the Ukraine was been separated from Russia for a very long time It's like it's not like the wall fell only a few years ago. That's 30 years ago now guys In fact more than 30 years do the math. This is the year 2024
Supposedly the law fell in when? Well, that's about 24 years ago, son. And guess what? In the meantime, the corruptors have been very busy. And look at what we got out of the deal. We're at the top. We're getting out of the way for now, though. God bless our Republic. We're rooted.
Which means to remember that little thing about the huon, huon, hanang-lang, you know, lab leaks. How about instead of this Israeli-operated out-of-the-apprange, this latest bird flu scam?
How about it's been operated out of the Ukraine and the idea is even the China story is a deflection to try and keep you busy So you don't remember what I just said because everybody was talking about the fact that the Russians might bomb Those biological weapon sites and then somebody might not like what happened My job and everybody's recent memory because this is not ancient. This is just in the last two years guys
Just in the last two years that you know about it now only because of a little conflict they created Taking over get our break. We'll be back in one hour with evening in some report. Hopefully everything will stay connected We've had a couple of power out as well. We're doing a program and communication is been up and down with everything else So we'll see what happens and again, God bless. We'll see you one hour
What's out there? The chains they are on its tracks of course, dear home. I can always count on you to somehow see it through. The sacred eternal. And gentlemen, this is the evening intelligence report. I'm Mark Courtney.
Before we go any farther, I want to let everybody know if we get disconnected, we've got storms in the area up here. It's not from the network end. We'll hook back up as quickly as we can, but everything has been sketchy and iffy link-wise today and yesterday a little bit too, but really it's not on us, it's around us. Now we've been hit with a couple of major rains, a couple of bursts, but
none of the big wins or anything like that. However, there have been some power flicker outages, some blasting about half a minute. And I've actually been hearing over the line. When you hear it over the line, you know it's hitting somewhere. Actually can hear it through the system. So again, if we cut off, it'll probably go to music and we'll be right back as quick as we can.
Anyway, you're listening to us on, oh well, forgive me, for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, North, South, Northeast, and West. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.org, and we're on
satellite, let's see, hide all our merchant operators out there no matter what body of water you're on. We're also in a myriad of other communications technologies to include shortwave, and that's WBCQ, the planet, and 6.160, regular shortwave. Give us a handshake. Use the email, liberty at provide.net. Let us hear how we found. Give me a message there. I know a lot of people have been giving us some feedback. We appreciate that.
It is communications Tuesday. It is the 14th of May. That means this is the end. A, the third hour of the intel report, and B, the end of the first two full weeks of May. And that means we're halfway through. A little under, but halfway through. 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. I'll give it all just got captain and 2024 battle for the Republic book to the Winter War and again by my German or forgive me French well, let's do proper order here
Swiss made, of course, let's see, Arien et Versailles. This particular company is up, but this is a, of course, a Swiss timepiece. It was originally used on French night bombers in World War I. And we know specifically because this particular model was only used on one specific French bomber during World War II. It was a night bomber.
Interestingly enough after the war, and when the French lost the beginning of World War II, the Germans ended up with all these, and they ended up putting them on German U-boats because they were a very fine chronometer. So I do not know the history of this device if it was peeled off a vehicle or wreckage in World War I, because a lot of guys came back to Michigan from World War I, or if this is a piece that came off of a capture during the
You know, World War II experience because needless to say we captured a lot of the German boats in dock and probably part of the German supply system got rolled over as we know. So it went from the French to the Germans, but there's only two places it could have been used. And it's a wall mount, or actually it's a control board mounted. It's got four flange screw points on. It's really cool. Keeps precise time and is better than all of my digitals that are here, including my atomic clock.
because they aren't always right. They keep gimmicking out. The atomic clock off to the right is really doing weird stuff this week. Tells me the sunspots, electromagnetic nonsense the government's doing, etc., etc., is not doing us any good. So I'm counting on the, let's see, mechanical world as opposed to the digital nonsense of artificial intelligence. More on that in a minute, too. Before we get any farther, do we have a caller?
Yes, Mark, John up here in Maine. How are you doing tonight? Oh, right. Go right ahead, John. Quick update on our Ben legislation. All of the bills got shut down except one our governor refused to put her name to, which means it becomes law. She refused to veto, which means it becomes law on its own. And then the critters decided to drag the one back in.
which was the redefinition of a machine gun and bum stock ban and trigger stuff and they're going to try and pass it even though she vetoed it. So don't know where that stands, but you know, it's crazy. Maine never has any problems with this stuff, but you can see the propaganda push into Maine and the money coming in to make these laws get put through. It's sickening.
So, but other than that, the Tarpedo landed and it was worth the wait for the disc. Thank you very much. And I'll start reading the book. But that came in today. And what I really like was the history of it. Reading the first manual now and the introduction and the history of all of these things is something that you don't really get. So, very excellent reading. And I appreciate the time you guys took to produce this.
Finally, if you have anybody that's coming this way that's going to head your way, I've got several hundred of those DVD, plastic DVD jackets, whatever you want to call them. Dual cases. Yes, the dual cases. Be more than happy to give them to them to get to you if you'd like. Absolutely. Just hang on to them. Oh yeah, they're not going anywhere. They're in the basement.
But you know that truck driver stopped by here several years ago and we got together up there at the truck stop. I think we even called in on the show as a matter of fact. But yeah, so if you got anybody like that swinging by, let me know. I'll be glad to unload about eight cases of those jewel cases on you. Well, they'd rather go to Maine than New York. You know that. So you know what? The only thing that's interesting
Okay, here's a question. The bridge that got hit is a major corridor. Did that corridor disruption affect the traffic all the way up to Maine? I mean, did it change or deflect anything? I'm just curious. I haven't noticed it. I don't get out on the road a whole lot anymore, but as far as I can see, it seems like there's more traffic now than there ever has been. Right, I'm hoping not.
Yeah, it's it still looks the same Well, I was hoping that they would start to Yeah, I think well, I know I'm just curious because they said that this will disrupt traffic all up and down the East Coast Now I would assume that's trucker traffic, but you know, I know the truckers will find a way around anything So once they figured out what what back road works best the bridge means nothing and that's exactly what happened I Go ahead
Yeah, we've got that right here. There's a food distribution facility all about eight or 10 miles up the road here, and the people can actually cut through the town and go up the back road to get to the interstate rather than paying toll where they're at to get on the interstate. They know. They know all these tricks. Yeah. Well, again, interestingly enough,
We've got a number of people that are in the middle sections of the country that are driving right now And they really haven't been back home for that reason kind of avoiding, you know, whatever Nonsense, I guess that they know there's been some confusion in the area and it surrounds or moves out to about a state or so I would say But again, what happens is you get a you'll get a routine, you know They'll figure out what routine works best and they'll apply it and then that won't be a problem anymore
The interesting thing is that the question... The question you need to ask yourself was what avenue did they use before that bridge was built? Right. They had to get around it. Right, exactly. Here's the other thing. Now, government stupidity and fumblescrewing, they're talking about it taking 10 years to put that bridge back online.
Now that begs to ask the question like are they saying that they're just absolutely gonna disavow the whole original Construct because not all of the bridge was destroyed. I'm sure most of it was moved. I mean obviously it was but There you know, there's two options, you know, just rebuild what's there and make it better You're not going to use what's in the water, but you know rebuild make better or Make all new but still
This is typical where in the past because it's a primary, you know, supposedly a primary transient route. Guess what? It wouldn't take 10 years to put back online. So the baffle everybody would be asked from one direction or another. But again, it's also Planet Krapu 21st Century, a job that would have been done in four to five years is now a 10 year mega death. Oh my God, I can't handle it project. The longer than it exists, the more costs.
Right, the more they can milk it, which is really what's happened the moment that they realized, yeah, there's an opportunity. Every parasite on the planet started to zero in on that target. Especially when the Fed said they're going to do it. They're going to take care of it. Go ahead, color. Didn't they say that bridge was built in 1977? That's only 47 years. Right. It's a relatively new bridge. By comparison, you know, and again, better constructed, I'd be willing to bet.
If you're to look at the quality of construction, steel and materials where they came from, it in general is better built than most anything that might have been newer that has been produced because progressively you're using or moving towards foreign steel, not American, as is almost always the case nowadays. And that's like the way I said, it would make more sense for a rebuild of the existing span. The only thing is whether or not they're deciding, well, I mean, I understand some of the math. They could be just saying,
Well, we've got a chance, we might as well put all new up there. We'll make it bigger and better and whatever, but that usually isn't the case. You get less and it costs more. So I think that's where they're headed. The thing I don't understand is I've driven from here down to Florida a number of times and I've gone through Maryland. It just depends on which way I'm headed. But it's been all interstate. I do not remember that bridge at all. I never crossed that bridge going north to south.
I'm trying to place in my mind, right? Where is this thing? Yeah. How does it apply to me? Right. Exactly. Which is the thing that everybody else is going to say. It's like, well, yeah, it's probably important. But, you know, again, and it does, I'm sure, have a lot more traffic. All bridges are put there, you know, like we said, they're there for a reason.
But as far as doing without it, I think the biggest problem they're going to have is people may decide that they like the alternate solution by the time they're done. That's another problem when you do something. I'm sure it was. I would think it was because they had exact numbers and control going across the bridge.
They knew exactly how many cars they knew, you know, because obviously they have cameras, camera security. But I believe that they also were able to stop the traffic, which means they had an immediate response team, which means usually that's a toll condition. You know, that's where they've got somebody ready to stop you on a moment's notice. And they did. They did retard the traffic that was hit, you know, was damaged by the event, lost.
But again, this just means that people are forced to find a solution and truckers will once they get into a habit like that, they have a tendency not to go anywhere. In other words, they'll just stick to the routine because typically it does end up being a better route. I've driven with a lot of guys that, you know, when they're not in their trucks, they're just driving in their four wheel vehicles and
Tell you what she gave a lot of hours off by having somebody behind the wheel that does it for a living Makes a big difference Now we drive through those records Yeah, they do all and know all the cuts like you said also They know where everybody is they know where the bad towns are that you don't want to go through Even if they're small dots, you know, yeah, these guys are ticket crazy
So, you know where those places are and they lose business accordingly because everybody circumvents the problem, which is what happens. So sometimes they re-sculpt. But I'd be just curious because, again, we'll have more, I think, interesting things happening shortly. We've had too much activity, especially in the last two or three days. We've not had really bad weather up here. We got hit in the spots far to the west of Michigan, west side of Michigan.
But we've not been any worse off than we have been in any other year for storms. So the activity we're having and that we've seen, and also the contacts that we've had at the township, or I should say the town, city, and county level, and the state, from the Fed indicates that they're on the move, they're ready to play a game. There's something afoot.
Not panicking anybody. It's just pay attention to keep your eyes peeled because her see too much I heard Shelby's report earlier today Right and we had we've had several today from here that were kind of interesting Charlotte, Michigan off the I-95 994 corridor up towards the Lansing area
A couple of Blackhawks landed in an open area, not near a training facility, not near any government facility, dropped off in the middle of nowhere. Where they landed, there was a, could be seen from the highway. They were offloading material from a semi-truck and also from a service pickup truck that very much sounds by description like the same vehicle, the vehicles that Shelby was describing out there. They were a standard pattern.
Well, they were offloading some equipment from the truck, pickup truck, the smaller truck, and they were offloading material and loading it onto the helicopters from the semi-trailer and truck. And the individuals were all in black. Now Michigan National Guard and our aviation sections don't wear black. And the helicopters were black, black hawks. So, man, that's why I said, were they dark green black hawks or were they black? He said, no, they were black.
So, again, and that's not the only report. We've had a lot of other meetings. There's a bunch of other stuff that's already, we've gotten feedback from sheriff's departments on specific issues. So they're, they, remember, it takes time to get the machine in motion for whatever they're doing and or they're practicing for what they have planned. So this, again, it's Tuesday. This is an odd day out for training for, for instance, for the National Guard.
However, these aircraft were not National Guard. Now we have a couple of spook and cooke aviation units. We've reported on this before. I guarantee that the Hueys and OH-58s were long in the tooth after the Vietnam War, and they were using them extensively in the 90s for the black helicopter elements that were out there. We documented, filed, photographed, watched all their motion.
But what's interesting is we have a separate clandestine click that's here in the state. The only thing I didn't get a chance to do is if I had a little quicker report, we'd attract those Blackhawks to wherever they go. But hopefully our people picked up because, guys, you can track helicopters by ear across the state.
If you have people in every county, we did this in the 90s all day. You don't need super sophisticated technology. You hear whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop. You go out and check to see what you're hearing. Okay, so it's three shit hooks to CH-47s. They're headed up from the Ohio Valley. They're just coming up north of Napoleon, Michigan.
First call goes to Jackson County, then you call the two sidebar counties or other parts of the county that you're located in, north of where you're located because the aircraft are headed to the north.
You contact the person by phone, they go out, observe, they hear whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop whoop who
In fact, NOE creates even more suspicion for obvious reasons. So if all of a sudden they drop to an NOE situation, NAPA, the Earth Flight, they're not supposed to be doing that for the most part. And they've actually put some pretty extensive restrictions on that kind of activity, except for the clandestine arm. So this helps us to identify that this is a target that absolutely needs to be tracked.
And so those two aircraft and others like it, we've followed them literally across the state to their, you know, to wherever it is they were headed or back to their point of origin, which in some cases takes them all the way up to the northeastern corner of the state of Michigan, just a heads up. So which is the long way away from- I'm out here and I can hear aircraft like today when I-
before I went to lose another tooth at the dentist, so to speak, I was walking the Husky and just got out the door and I heard a jet engine way up in the sky. And I could tell by that engine, that was a military aircraft. I couldn't see it because it was kind of cloudy, but I could tell it was military. And it's the same way with the helicopters when they do the training up here and the Marines bring their helicopters up and they go from Brunswick to Rangeley.
I can hear them or when they go from rangely back to Brunswick, I know exactly where they're going because I'm right between both places. And you can hear them a long way off. You can hear them well before you see them. Exactly. And this is one of the things everybody needs to remember. We can hunt them harder than they do us and we don't have to. You can necessarily use the B that high-tech. The cell phone is convenient, but in the past, we've simply used CB radio.
It was just as efficient. And since you're talking only a county away at a time, typically you would light up the radio net. Everybody's on the radio. Everybody hears the signal for as far as your signal reaches. Everybody's received the same report.
So everybody knows what they're looking for. The people step out. You get another, you know, a handshake over the radio on the frequency, confirming that the aircraft had been observed and their direction of flight from that point of observation. And you can step by step by step walk across the state with them. You'll be there ahead of them.
Because again, since you know the direction, you can actually call ahead to the suspected route. Now remember you also, as I mentioned, it's kind of like a duck foot, like a three point call for a heads up because if they're traveling north, they can alter direction, you know, east or west, you know, in other words, left or right. Well, forgive me, if it's east, that would be right. And then left, which is left, okay, or just say west, which is...
Left, Mark will get it right. But anyway, the obvious point is that you can progressively step by step isolate the activity and take it to its final destination. This of course also allows you to identify what may be an unknown threat location that before you might not have known, or at least an area of activity. Example, these aircraft were landing at a very particular point.
And the staging point on the ground was obviously prepped with the truck and the semi truck, which were deployed in a non-standard location. It was not a complex or building. It was a field location. And again, there were two aircraft involved at the time. Now...
Again, right now we do have some weather activity going on. As I said before, we might go off the air here. Sounds like it's calmed down a little bit right here directly, but we've had storm fronts all point to the compass through the whole of the day out on the horizon. We're just relatively close, but still not on top of us. We're just circling around us. That's not what these people are responding to.
We have had no significant storm issue today that would warrant some of the activity we've seen. But we have seen this type of activity before. So again, prior to proper planning prevents piss poor performance observation. Remember the basic who, what, where, when, what were you doing, what were they doing, SITREP, who, what, where, when.
What were they doing? What were you doing? Now with a sit rep like this, when we say what were you doing? No, I don't need to know exactly, you know, where you were per se, but you know, how were you observing? Were you traveling in a vehicle? Were you standing in a static position? Were you observing from another aircraft? You were observing from a building, okay? How were you observing the activity that you reported?
Now what what what were they doing is obvious as far as your general description of activity start with a short timeline But the most important thing is we get an idea of how you observe so we can rate the you know rate the event so to speak Go ahead call or jump in there. Hey, it's time to land Oh, um, a really good video came out today from a channel called Washington gun law and
video is the Ninth Circuit actually overturns the federal gun law and then he leaves a question mark on the end. So this is about a 12 minute video and this guy is pretty smart. He's a lawyer and he comes out with videos every day and apparently the Ninth Circuit Court is made up of three judges and they opined that previous
There were previous cases about convicted felons, non-violent convicted felons being able to own guns based upon current and past cases. And they disagreed with three of these and ruled in one current case that a person who is a convicted felon, as long as they are not in prison, on probation, or on some kind of
to provide release, and as long as it was a nonviolent crime, does have a right to own a gun because there's nothing provided in the Constitution for that. And the argument was, is that the federal government is arbitrarily ostracizing human beings, as it were described in several cases, from their natural rights. So my question to you is,
And I don't know a lot about the different courts and how the progress of bills go through. But if the Ninth Circuit overturns a judgment, and the case was specifically called United States v. Duarte, they pulled this guy over and he had a gun. He was in possession of and he's convicted of falling. So this circuit court overturned it. My question to you is,
At what point and what is the time progression until this goes through to another court and finally gets to the Supreme Court? Well, it said the 9th, so that means you're probably looking at between two and three and a half to four years before it gets up to the Supreme Court.
because there's a series of sub appeals that they can do. Now it could be as short as two years because we've already seen that they've been doing some expressway runs on certain rulings with the lower courts. Now here's the problem. Number one, what they're doing is they are iceberg chipping at the core problem. There is no accommodation for taking any of your natural rights in law.
None. Does it? Zero. Nobody likes it.
But the bottom line is that, remember, this is what we've said a million times. If you have the statue of justice in the courtroom, which by the way, it's supposed to be there, it's one of those things, it basically is a representation of the law. Well, what does the scale represent? The scale represents the cost and payment. Think of it that way. It's credit, debit.
Now, what it comes down to is if supposedly through the process of blind justice, which hasn't existed in this country for so long, none of us have been alive to see blind justice in America. There was variations on it to a degree because certain judges are starry-eyed and actually try to maybe do the right thing in their mind. But the bottom line is, is we haven't had a justice system in our lifetime. However...
If we look at these scales, the idea is that you levy a particular cost in time. When that payment has been made, the scales of justice are balanced. You cannot put your finger on the scale and say, yeah, but I don't like this. Okay, here's the thing. If you don't like it, let's say that it's rape or mass murder or whatever. Well, you know what? You have accommodation for punishment.
So you determine that the punishment should be greater if that's your argument, and it's put into law, and then the scale has to be balanced. But once the scale is balanced, no matter what the case is, it's irrelevant. Even the idea, and I know this is horrible because a lot of people, we've been in this argument for as long as I've been alive listening to it from a legal perspective.
It is not legitimate to hold the record before a particular question of charge because all of the other actions have been neutralized. Did you exact a payment? Do you think the guy was really bad? Yeah, he's really bad. How long did you keep him in prison? Well, 10 years. Okay, so you kept him in jail for 10 years. Was that the required punishment for the charge? Yeah, yeah, it was.
Whoa, did you think that was enough? What? Well, you guys passed all the laws. Didn't you think that that was enough? Well, yeah, it's what the law says. Okay, so how do we get some idea that we can go past that amituration date? The bond, so to speak, has matured. It's neutral. It's dead. You killed it by your own law.
So how could you turn around and tell me that you're going to ultra punish or add punishment for anything like that? When California, guys, I'll kick everybody's memory here. I know about the whole idea of punishment more. Well, then increase the charge time. But what they did is they knew what they were doing, the stinking communists when they did the three-strike crap, okay?
Do you know how many people were smartly arguing that, well, if you could do that, you could arbitrarily enforce anything? And that was the whole idea. The three strikes, your outcrop, should be out – it was fought over and over and over again, tooth and nail, right up until it finally was anchored. And it has no legitimacy whatsoever in true common law American jurisprudence.
Now, in admiralty commerce law, you can get away with anything and lie your ass off, so what the hell? But that's not our law. And the fact of the matter is that there, in reality, other than the fact that you may have a high crime or you have what is considered a levied crime or a common crime,
What I mean by common is petty theft. You used to be helped. You stole a loaf of bread. They kill you sometimes, depending on where you were. So I guess that might be petty theft, but it could be terminal. Okay. We know how people have been in the past. Remember, that was the whole thing about, yes, Miss. What did you do? I started off with bread for my sister and her baby. And for that, they put me in jail for 20 years. Yes, Miss.
But the fact of the matter is that that would be in an American court system that would have been and was demonstrated to be unacceptable. So you see, when you have the arbitrary D'Admiral or the Admiralty Scank Court of the kosher mafia, well, you get all kinds of bullshit like this that we're seeing.
But the fact of the matter, it should never have been. We shouldn't be in this situation. And everybody who fought these cases are a whole shitload of people in the courts who did know exactly what I'm talking about, even though they didn't fight too hard. Go ahead. Yeah, I'm just agreeing with you. I didn't know it would take that long since it's starting to see the light of day. But it was like a year ago. There was like one judge, one federal judge that said this was ridiculous. Now you've got –
three on the Ninth Circuit Court and they actually overturned a case based upon this. So. Right, you know. Let me say that the only reason I think they're doing this is because they think it's going to piss off everybody who's pro-gun because again, as Guns N' Gadgets talked about it too, but as both of the gentlemen said, I mentioned this piece that you're just talking about on the air last week.
It's been up. It was 12 minutes long and I figured, okay, well, we didn't get a chance to play it, I think. It came out today. Well, that's an extension of his original piece then, if it came out today. That's another one. That's in addition to what he already did on the subject because... No, it's really... It's good that it's brought forward, but you see, they only want to go so far because they're trying to appease your enemy.
That's what this whole thing is like. No, it's wrong in the first place any restriction upon all of your natural rights the first ten articles of the Bill of Rights remember not amendments the first ten articles of the Bill of Rights were written in stone and were fought for For the very reason that we're having to use them now
And so what they had to do was alter the court so that the Bill of Rights can be arbitrarily looked at rather than anchored in bedrock, which is where they are supposed to be. And the whole idea of this arbitrary action to, again, illegitimately and indefinitely punish someone is not part of our American court system or our justice system.
And that's what needs to be pointed out. It's like, yeah, well, that's interesting because point to a time in the past where this was considered acceptable, the only type of charge. And they're specifically enumerated. Number one, murder, of course, could be you can exact the price of the death penalty, which varies depending upon the...
attitude of the state and the population. And again, what we've talked about before here just a minute ago is even though traditionally, you know, again, a highness murder or a, and we're not talking about dueling or anything like that. We're not talking about each party is mutually prepared to defend themselves, accept the risk and take charge to each other.
We're talking about, you know, highway robbery murder, bank robbery murderer coming into a house and slaughtering a family murderer. That's going to get you probably killed before you ever get to the court anyway back then. But it's the idea that you could vary the charge, I should say vary the cost.
And many states have pulled back from the death penalty. Okay, so they were able to do that. But they couldn't go beyond it, like say, not only do I want him dead, but I want to draw and quarter him. And I want to chop into small pieces. And I want to take his toes first. And I want to pull his entrails out. Oh, I guess we could do that. After the end, they did in England, drawing and quartering, right? But we don't allow that here. Why? Well, because that's one of those, what's that thing in that? Oh, that's that Constitution and Bill of Rights thing.
That's a rather evil slash excessive punishment. Yeah, probably. The Founders understood full well the corruption of the court. And the first rule is that, again, there has to be a leveling for the sake of equity and the function of society. Populations die real quick when you start plugging in police state mindset. And that's really what this whole thing is about.
If you didn't like the fact that, you know, Bonnie and Clyde, or let's just say somebody's going out in Robin places, and it turns out that you didn't keep them long enough, and they go out and do it again, oh, they go out and do it again, oh, they go out and do it again. And by the way, right now they're doing it three, four, five times in two years. Well, then there's something wrong with your brain. There's nothing wrong. Our form of government's great. Our form of court system is great. You're just not applying it.
And our form of punishment is viable. It would work. But the way it's working right now, you're basically stating that any individual in the country is arbitrarily in a big-ass prison. Well, we have an incarceration point, which is a limiting of motion movement and a taking of freedoms as part of the cost in punishment.
When you leave that you don't step from one prison into a larger open-air prison Oh, wait a minute that'd be like Gaza with the Jews running Gaza and all the Christians and Muslims being in that big open-air prison there I guess that is what they'd like to do here and by the way, that is what this is all about So this is one of those things where yeah, I
I remember to the day, the first time this particular, when this argument was brought forward, and I was very young, and I really, it was one of those fights I was just listening to, because I wasn't involved in the courts really at that time. But I remember like it was yesterday because of the people that I knew that were in the courts, and both the three-strike scam and the idea that you have this ongoing arbitrary, constant punishment, which cannot take place in a legitimate American form of court.
It can't anybody who's supporting it is an absolute prostitute and whore in my enemy Mark bars. I'm concerned go ahead. Yeah, there's another video. I wanted to talk to you about there's a guy that came out with He's got a this came out a few weeks ago His channel is called American outlaw and the title of the video is advanced comms with a civilian and then not at Balfam and apparently
He's got about a 32, 1, 32 minute video talking about a system of communications that cannot be tracked. And it was pretty interesting. Communications Tuesday, I figured I'd bring it up. So again, the channel is American Outlaw. The recent video he came out with is called Advanced Times for the Civilian, Not About Things. Right. Not About Things.
You know what, I'm not a foul thing. And I've got, you know, listen, and I've said this before many, many times. At some point when you have, when you're doing civil defense, civil defense does not require you to be a super secret squirrel. What it requires you to be is, you know, is that everybody's on board with their customs and codes.
And their radios can reach each other and they're, you know, telling people, hey, this is what's going on over here. I saw this and, you know, we need to be aware, wake up, this is the situation over here at Santa Claus. You know, that's what a bow thing is for. And, you know, when the crap hits the fan. But I mean, right now, bow things are great for around the property.
you know, and just keep it in touch. But then you've got these more advanced ones that use the same frequencies, which is called HYS. And they've got, it's a much bigger unit and they're about 180 bucks on Amazon. And these things are 25 watts and they have internal fans, they're handheld. And I've got one of those as well. So it's like, you know, to me, if I was in a situation where
I'm with a group of guys and we're doing some mission and we need to stay in touch with each other even though we might get far away apart. Or better yet, if you're in an urban situation and there's a lot of buildings in between you, I would go for the, if I had a choice between here's a radio and it's a secret frequency and no one can listen in and it's two watts. Or here's a radio and it's regular two meter and 70 centimeter
dual band and you might have someone listening in, but it's 25 watts. I'm going to take the 25 watt radio because if you're in between, if you're working with a group of guys and you're in between buildings, or if you're inside a building and the other group of guys are inside a building right next to you, with 25 watts you can hear each other. With two watts you're not going to feel. Right, it depends on, it depends on again the typical SOP for motion and contact.
And remember, we've talked about this before, as you minimize in a battlefield situation, one of the things that's being acknowledged now in Ukraine is the idea that the, and I think that's what this guy was talking about too, the video that you're talking about, is that when the Ukrainians, and I'm sure the Russians have, Belfang too, because everybody's got them. They're out in the market in a glut form.
that when you key up a strong transceiver like that, you're an artillery target. Immediately there's stuff coming in. But, remember, it depends on why do you need the range. Okay, let's go through the pyramid of control. Close quarter contact, I can use a very short quiet signal because it's you and me moving back and forth. Move out, I got you covered. Cover me, I'm moving out.
Now, that could be me talking to you, and we're two fireteam leaders. Fireteam one, copy, advance, advancing. And while you should minimize and have no signal if at all possible, you may still want to contact, communicate because especially in close quarter urban, you're not easily seeing around corners. So you're shortening your movements and distance.
But when we get up the scale, now I'm going from one squad to the next, that smaller radio set probably will do most of my work within the platoon. But what I need is a radio that takes me at the either the 40 man or 45 man platoon level across to the other platoons or to be able to speak to the company commander slash the command element that's moving the whole group.
And that's why a layer of different radios needs to be in place. The best example of this is Go, and I think you can do this because it's quick and easy, okay? During Korea, though you don't see as much documentation on the activity, it's there, but you have to dig out, find a good collection of images.
You will notice that with company or battalion commanders, you will see three, anywhere from two to three to four radio operators tagging along with one or two men.
Why are they doing that? Well, because one of the nets that's being committed to with regard to frequency is a platoon type operation, operational contact and control for monitoring company strength. In this case, if it's a battalion commander, he has three, four battalions to deal with, possibly more if he has attached support and other equipment, which he does have artillery, at least has four point deuce mortars.
So, each of these situations, you need more range and you need more strength to get to because you need to be able to issue precise and concise communication. During Vietnam, you'd see, although the ANPRC 8s, 9s, and 10s, which are a backpack radio, that's what you'd see early in the war. Well, why is there an 8 and 9 and a 10? Well, because each one slides up the scale frequency-wise.
And the idea behind this was, A, it kept people from squawking and talking on each other so I could give a unit one backpack radio here and they would talk amongst themselves. But the other purpose is the command structure because all three of those radios had the same distance and potential for broadcasting.
But I wanted one for platoon, I needed the other for company communications, and then I had a squawk-cough command frequency that everybody could jump to. And you'd have to have a radio to match each of those three radios.
During Vietnam later on you have the ANPRC 25s or the 77s and beyond that you had the ANPRC 90s and all the other crap that comes after the war. But if you look in the videos and you look in the war footage, you'll see, and I'll tell you what, oh, this example, you can watch it as a movie. Go watch We Were Soldiers, okay?
You know, you're doing a great job, Bob. You know, whenever you see Bob and there's the unit commander there, you'll never see just one radio operator. Have you noticed that? Why is that? Well, each one had a different job. That's why. So your radios serve the same purpose in smaller format. The good thing is they're smaller. One man theoretically could carry two radios easily. The problem is whether or not they could operate as an RO and commit to both tasks. So that's another problem. That's another issue.
But mostly, like you said, to get through obstacles, you need more output. But, and this is where the problem is, this is why, like I said, it's one thing for civil defense, as you said, that's a good idea. But one of the things to remember is when we get into this conflict, now in the early stage, all the bells and whistles will be operational. As this conflict develops, attrition will dictate that there will be less threat, contrary to what everybody thinks.
And if you don't think so, look at what happened with Ukraine. Think about this. How much equipment in communications, in artillery, in mortar, in ammunition, in pyrotechnics, in everything we use has been eaten up in just one local frontier contact that's relatively small by comparison to the big picture?
And again, now we're really, if you look at this, and I've had this conversation with everybody, and I argue, this is World War I. For all the space age, everything, you have to shut half of it off. Everybody, and by the way, this is the other thing I've got to emphasize, both sides are not turning on all of their electronic weapons. And what I mean by that is electronic countermeasures and electronic engagement for hunting.
And there's a reason they're saving it for the bigger game. So right now, even with the lesser technology, the RO's have to be very, very careful because they become bullet magnets. Because again, they're applying the same technology that we use for what's called counter battery radar. They're using, they're immediately applying the same concept with directional signal observation.
and tying it into indirect fire support for immediate response. So that's the thing we have to be aware of. Well, one of the things that I've always thought was I think there might be a time period between, I mean, let's just opine a bit and say, okay, the catalyst for the collapse is an EMP.
Okay, and right when the EMP happens, that doesn't mean that the Army or United Nations or whoever is going to be immediately mobilized. They may say to themselves, hey, let's just let the chaos ensue, and that way we don't have to have an attrition of our own forces, and then we can go in and do the cleanup work. So during that time, if you're not going to have the Army or the United Nations or whoever,
whoever is on the streets and they're just letting there be a free-for-all, that is a situation where I would say, okay, there's probably not somebody that's trying to train, you know, if you've got a bunch of, you know, gangs of people, there is...
Americans, for the most part, they're not that smart. So they're not going to be trying to train where you should ignore. So if you are in a situation where it's like, okay, we need to go into this urban setting and we need to procure a couple of large propane tanks, so we need to get this generator. So if you've got guys that, you know, you can have either a secret
set up where you know you don't people don't know that you're talking at all or you have 25 watt radios where you can reach each other easily and hear each other very clear at that point if there's no warfare going on if there's no mobilization of American or UN troops at that point doesn't really matter if people hear you right you have to judge you have to judge the threat
This is the first rule of why you need an intelligence element to evaluate the battlefield that you're on. This is why you have to be thinking in advance. Prior proper planning prevents BISPR performance in that, depending upon the threat environment that you're in, that dictates exactly how you're going to apply the tools in the toolbox. I'm not saying not to have it. The important thing is to know when to use it, which is really what our base conversation is.
And again, against the common threat in a local situation, it's not likely, but you got to remember there are a lot of people out there that are better at being geeks than you might imagine. So the one thing is, as you pointed out, the best way to do it is what everybody will see in doing, they call it battle language. In reality, it is basically phonetic code. The language that you are speaking, you understand at your end, and I understand at my end because we're on the same page.
And we ideally, and this is true especially in the environment you just described, you want it to appear to be something other than it is. And this is where developing adept radio operators is critical in helping everybody to work, you know, find the people that are most proficient at being able to operate the equipment but also operate within the languages that are necessary. And that's the part of that video.
and just get your opinion on it because you might pick up on something that I didn't and it's about 31, 32 minutes long so that might be something you'd like. That guy's name is American Outlaw, that's the name of the channel. Excellent.
Yeah, I mean, another thing is that, you know, we keep talking about CB radio and you hear someone say, oh, CB radio is dead. And then you say to them, why do you think we're talking about it?
That's why we wanted to see the radio. That's one of the reasons. Yeah. Yeah. People can't wrap their brain around the idea. That's what you want. It's like I've said. It's like going into radio operation. You look for what people aren't using because you won't have any competition for when you need to use it.
Now, that's not going to be true with CB. Again, this will vary because, as we've talked about before, at a given point, people are going to realize that certain things aren't coming back. When that happens, the first thing everybody will do is take their living memory and drag something from it and make it work.
Now, this is why FRS radios initially will be, you know, it's an up and down thing. If you get into the inner cities, everybody, without everybody, but a lot of people are using FRS because they want to get around things. And for that reason, that's your only competition really is going to be probably individuals who are into unique activities. They're not interested in you. They're not hunting for you. They're just trying to stay out of the line of somebody else's ear.
Now, the thing is that to a degree, the cops actually monitor those frequencies, or FRS for that reason, because they understand that, hey, there are people using a brain and getting around the cell phone, because the cell phones are prioritized for tagging, prioritized for infiltration. So the FRS would be the first thing that probably would light up hot.
And somebody got him as gifts somebody bought him as a novelty. Maybe they have him in the car Maybe not mostly they'll be on the garage or sitting in a shelf somewhere in the house and they forgot about him CB radio only because well grandpa's got one of those CB radios out in the garage or maybe dad and so they go out and realize well, we got a couple of them we could talk to each other but The problem with the idea just going out and getting them is gonna be well, how many are there out there to go get?
Guys, we've talked about this with supply and support in every aspect of what we've ever talked about here. If you have everybody go out to get toilet paper, how long did it take to run out of toilet paper? There are a lot fewer radios out there than there are rolls of toilet paper. So if it took how many days to run out, exhaust the toilet paper, inventory of America for entry of people who were scabbing on it or whatever, in other words ripping people off.
Or they just did it because I want my toilet paper. One way or another it didn't take very long. With radios, if people realize they needed them, guys, there's just not enough to anywhere near go around. It's like gas masks. It's happening with gas masks right now, quietly. But gas masks are, you know, the inventory has completely shifted out and they've been scraping to find something to replace it.
And so again, there's an example where that's a minority product, like I said. So move on the equipment now. Doesn't mean you're as high as you do it. Facebook, Marketplace, Craigslist, go to eBay, whatever you're going to do. But just get something on the table so that you can get into the game.
Now you've got more money resource you can do better and that's really what needs to happen We're at the top good points. God bless everybody appreciate your input. We made it through without interruption. That's amazing We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen the Empire is on the run we are on the mark
And let's not forget, you guys are the answer. Each idea, there's no idea it's a bad idea, but it'll have to be tested in the field. And we're going to find out real quick through OJT what works better. Some things we've already proven out. Others, they'll be tested depending upon the environment. But we need to be constantly thinking about solutions. So that's the good thing.
I'm going to get out of the way, Ed taking over, more LTR coming up. We'll be back tomorrow same time. Meanwhile, the rains and the storms flow around the state of Michigan and on Lake Erie. Well, it's Michigan in the springtime. God bless. Bye-bye.