Mark Koernke discussed communications equipment maintenance, radio testing, and preparedness on Communications Tuesday (May 14). He covered CB and VHF/UHF radio setup, fuse replacement in older radios, antenna maintenance, and vehicle-mounted equipment installation. Callers reported FEMA command operations in Oklahoma City and Michigan, including a staging area at an Embassy Suites with generator trailers and work trucks. Koernke addressed federal prisoner detention facilities in Michigan counties designed for long-term isolation, explaining their architectural features and federal funding. He discussed food storage options including MREs, humanitarian rations, and affordable alternatives like Hereford beef pouches and rice packs. The second hour covered militia organization principles, small unit tactics, and ammunition production by Palmetto State Armory. Koernke emphasized gas mask procurement and radiological threat protection, discussed Edison batteries as alternative power sources, and addressed Ukraine conflict dynamics and biological weapons labs.
has never sounded this good. Your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters, there are no more values for which great republic and each action tremble, too afraid to stand and fight, stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep, and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep. What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Finally got through, stole around us, but not on us. I'm watching a big black front to the east, a big black front to the south, and I mean a line. It's a solid, consistent front. So if we get cut off, it'll probably be at this end. We will reconnect as quick as we can. Everything is iffy, but we're going to continue, guys. So it's classic chicken springtime. Yeah, that's right. And with the crappy maintenance done on most of the systems now, talking to one of the installers who stopped by and was down the street. I can see why. I appreciate feedback from individuals who actually do the job. More on that in a minute. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the first hour, I'll bet 15 minutes late. Afternoon Intelligence Report. I'm Mark Kornke, one day closed certificate. one day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories south, north, west, and east. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.org, and we are on satellite Say hi to all our merchant marine operators out there. No matter what body of water you're on, might be a little rough on Lake Erie today. I'm going to tell you that. I would say maybe a little white cress, maybe big white cress, because the storm over there is impressive. Of course, it may just be passing through. It always does. But anyway, if you're out there, again, be careful where the lifeboats are, as I always say. But I'm pretty sure if you're a merchant marine, you got a pretty good idea where those torpedo launchers are. Anyway, we're also in a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. And it is Tuesday. It's Communications Tuesday. And as a matter of fact, it is also the end of the second full week of May. It is the 14th of May. 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 damage. I'm a doctor not a brick mason and 2024 battle for the Republic the dance of swords let the dance continue and book one and how it started Again, be careful on the roads everywhere, but right here. We are As has typically been the case, the storms go around, but they don't hit right here. In fact, they even got a little smattering of rain. When I say smattering, I mean, yeah, well, there's a few dots and then it's gone. Meanwhile, I know someone's getting poured out into the south. I can see up front to the north and, like I said, Lake Erie off to the east. Well, the Ontario Peninsula has got to be getting wet right now too. So again, pay attention on the roads. Remember, it first rained, it gets slick, you got the oil coming up. And we got some really nice road work that's been done. First time in a long time, I-94 is kind of finished. They'll never finish it. They know how to milk that government tit, that fed tit big time. So we went off that big pig. But right now, pretty nice pavement, so you can make good time. But remember, it's a little slick first thing because all those road oils off the cars are coming up. Anyway, communications. This is where we talk about backups to backups to backups. We haven't used two of the backups yet. I want to say thank you. One of our friends gifted us some better technology that we have on standby. I've been tempted, but I'm not going to use it until we get into either a firefight exchange slash or an escalation of the conflict then that'll be it. The other technologies everything is kind of hiccuping right now which I think is rather fascinating. Some very disassociated from the others so again I don't know really what's going on because we're not really getting hit with the weather right here so why are we having connection issues and ground line issues which is rather fascinating. Of course, we don't know what planet Krakoo slash the powers that be have done to skimp or deny preventing maintenance or general maintenance or replacement. We know how that's been. Anybody but America so they can collapse America, which is why I need backups to backups to backups. Today, I spent no, I don't want to spend an hour, but I can only spend about half an hour on communications equipment today because I've got this parcel of both CB, 2 meter VHF, UHF radios that I've been going through and bagging. And as you know, you want to set up a quick test table, test rack, and you leave the antenna station that you know is going to work in place. Leave a mic right there. Actually, you need three because there are different mic connectors, depending on what era, and quality of radio. Don't forget that. There's different pin combinations. But have everything on hand with a clean power supply or in this case I have a marine boat battery that was Available at a yard sale and it's a great way. It's great for recharging and It's set up with solar the way I did it so I can hook everything up and run the piece of equipment right there and throw some energy on the antenna and see what happens. The big thing here again is test all of your equipment. I'd say six radios, I got a chance to look at today. Two of them have issues. The two that you would think look beautiful, look like they just came out of the box. Apparently when somebody disassembled them, I think what somebody did, Hugo Vorsa, didn't realize that you can screw in the thread, you know, there's a thread lock for many of the microphones. So the wand is virtually brand new but I'm going to have to do some soldering there because again the mic fixture is what's loose. I don't know if it's broken, I just know that it's not working and it's a wiggly thing. Now it shouldn't wiggle because this thing doesn't look like it's hardly used. So I think it was during the de-installation phase when Hugo undid the equipment and didn't know what he was doing. We've seen enough of that. Another thing with the other unit was Again, nice shape, not a brand new radio, actually. Another one of the Jordans that I picked up matches the one I've got in the truck. And I just can't figure out power. I'll have to wait till later to check to see what's going on with power. That's what it appears to be. And that could be a number of things. Here's one of the things to remember about older radios. Back in the day, it's not the old days, but it is, well, half a century ago, 1970s, at early late 60s and 70s, you do have a fusible link, a fuse, inside the system, but they didn't think to make it very convenient, people. Initially it was, well, if you've got a problem with your radio, you're gonna sit it, pull it out, sit it on the bench, or take it to a radio guy. Radio geeks can open it up and go, yep, it's the fuse. So, inside you typically have the dual prongs sandwich connectors, the squeeze connectors, and you have a glass fuse in there. And that's 99% of what's wrong with your power if it's an older radio. Now most, all the other radios you're going to run into have an inline fuse. In other words, the power cord comes out the back, there's a milky plastic, looks like about the size of a little tiny tootsie roll. It comes apart, the fuse is in there. That's newer, okay, but many of the older radios, well it doesn't work at all. Well, unscrew, there's only four screws typically on the cover, maybe one screw on the back. And the wave of rain finally hit right here. Yeah, and we're getting power fluctuation. Sorry about that guys. So again, beware if we get disconnected for the moment. We'll hook right back up anyway This was a great idea To eliminate having to go in and have somebody else do some work Oh, typically, I mean a lot of people were widget fixtures anyway, so the screwdrivers were you know kind of cheap And you figure out real quick that that fuse is the problem. You buy a few extras, you tape one inside the hull or you make a little rack for it, a little fixture for it. And that way, whenever it goes out again, you got one right there. Which I like to do with anything that does require a fuse or require any kind of replaceable bulb. Or whatever depending if you've got something you know that can be a perishable you want it right there with the equipment now Let me give you an example was really cool if you ever get the remember the old mini mag flashlights I got dozens of them I just picked up a few more and a big box of parts I don't you know how many I can put together had a little krypton bulb the double double fork pin Remember that there was always one spare bulb so if you get one of those before you go any farther unscrew the cap on the back and look inside the little retainer and there's a little plastic body in there and there's another bulb. So if the bulb that's in that little flashlight's out, a lot of people didn't even know that existed. And those flashlights were not cheap. And especially when they're the American made versions, you want to keep all those kel lights and mag lights functional. especially the fine 6D cell Beacher Ass Down flashlight. We can keep it on your shoulder there. It's got plenty of power. And remember, there are change-out kits. You can actually switch those over to LED if you want to. My attitude is I got a shitload of those Krypton bulbs. I'm not going to change them until I have to. When I do, I'll have an LED bulb, you know, LED replacement off to the side. But... An example of what I've got right here in front of me I have two because this is a little one of the bulk here see I've got two I've got a extra space for one of the regular bulbs and one of the LED replacements inside the flashlight and this is a two cell C battery Kel light I'd say was made probably 1991 1992 It's alloy hull, can't really break it, really well built, and yes, these do come with colored lenses half the time. This one doesn't, but most of them do. So replacements. Now go back to the CBs again. Now here's the reason you definitely want to, if you're using all this radio equipment, none of the fuses, the reason that they went to the fuses that they use typically on the CBs and other equipment is because it was the common fuse for the day. Today, as you know, we have two different, at least, formats, not to mention European and Japanese, or I should say European and Asian fusing systems for cars. They are a totally different double blade, both medium format, now there's tiny format, they chinsed out much cheaper. So you have to have those on board, which is why you want to keep those little spares with the radio. They're not going to be working on anything you have in the vehicle unless you have older vehicles and we do I have a bunch of Dodge M880s located all over the state here more than a few and they all take the the first generation's sandwich, but they have some old conventional crossover fuses which is rather interesting and it was because it was the transition vehicle and A lot of stuff was up and down. They had an inventory apart. So Okay, well we're not lost here on the network, but we just lost power for a minute and more. Okay, it's back on. So anyway, these vehicles have a mix, but what you want to do is make sure that if that radio gets pulled out, all of the accoutrements that you can are with it ready to go. Now this gets to another question because some people have asked, well Mark, if you're going to tuck the radio out of the way or off under the seat, do you want to... screw the hanger for the microphone obviously on the dash. Well, actually I like to put it down below anyway just keep it out of the way and I don't need an umbilical stretching around where I have to pass my legs if I have to go from one side of the vehicle to next. I mean think tactical don't think convenient driving for the day. You want it so you can kick something either out of the way, it's a loose fixture, or it's up out of the way so you're not going to be impeded by it when you have to say evacuate to the right and you're the driver. Stuff in your way slows down. Slowing it down may mean that you're gonna snag something you didn't want to. It's amazing how fast you can actually operate when you realize a threat, okay? So, these are things you need to think about is the ergonomics of your equipment, your vehicle, when you're putting them together. A lot of vehicles you can actually roof mount, don't bore a hole through your roof, it's another place for stuff rusts. Don't forget that. Try not to bore holes in metal, especially roofs because They always leak. It's not an if, it's just a when. And with the China Sport crap metal that they've been using more recently, it's even worse than it was when we bought all that Japanese metal back in the 70s and put it under the curse. You told the cost. Yeah. You told the cost. And again, in fact, I'm fortunate right now. Now this is true. You got to watch. Check for people who are installing things. I, right now, am flush in a lot of pre-rubber O-ring or rubber washer, permanently installed flat washer stock. Right now, I'm getting about maybe a quart jars worth every second week. And there's three sizes and the installation can always send spares. And whenever they don't use, they're going to chuck. So instead, it's being saved up for me. Now, if I was doing like it was just mentioned here, I'm going to do that roof if I have to, if I have to. And in fact, here's the thing. Understandable, you'd think, well, it's safer to bore a hole in the side of the chassis of the truck, like in the back of the box to run a coax out that way, which is true. It is. A lot of, even the companies do that. I mean, to a degree, they've got to get power in and out of that box. Needless to say, they go through the firewall. But there's other locations. You'll notice if you look at the back of the box, sometimes you have service line points for different equipment, depending on if it's an industrial truck, you know, ordered, or if it's just something you bought off the shelf, you know, it's a regular 1500 or 2500 or whatever, half ton, three quarter ton, blah, blah, blah. The fact is that if you do that, you still want to caulk it, just like we just mentioned here. Now you can always peel that away to get something in and out. And yes, it is obnoxious. But it saves you a lot of hassle with moisture not being where you want it. And that's pretty much everywhere you're going to be. It's not just to protect the electrics, it's all the other junk you're carrying. Equipment gets wet, it gets moldy. Equipment inside that's metal will rust. Aluminum will oxidize, everything does. So let's try and minimize to maximize and think ahead. So again, now by the way, if you are going to bore a hole, let me remind you something else that you should invest in. There are channel guides for cutting through when you cut through an area like that you have basically what are push type gasket systems and I highly recommend them if you don't know where to look go to a camper supply we've got a nice wholesaler down the road and they have everything on the shelf but then I have another source with another one that does trailers and they have everything else on the shelf. So the neat thing is if you need it, you can find it. But prior prepper planning prevents piss poor performance. Now, why do I want to put that rubber grommet in there? Well, if I just run my cable or wire, it doesn't mean it's what it is, through that bare sheet metal, what's the likelihood I'm going to gradually wearing back and forth and back and forth and back and forth and the thousands of times that just carefully and slowly rubs on that sharp surface of sheet metal. Eventually, that's not nice. So again, if you can't buy it, you can't figure it out, you can make them. There's a dozen different ways you can make the grommet that you want for that. Now the neat thing is that the camper places, they actually have what is a diaphragm, it's got an X-cut in it so you can poke things through and you actually get a lot better seal in general. And you still goop it up. Once you get the right distance for the cable, Use the butyl caulk and just goop it up right there. Not a lot, just enough to give it that much more protection. Another thing is wear and tear on the antennas. Now, I've mentioned many times going and buying the cheap antennas over at the truck stop. The cheapest ones look like either a fake 800 meg cell phone antenna or a short stubby other antenna. They're both CB. They're both tunable, appropriately tunable for your needs. However, as we've seen in the long haul, and this is a problem, you're going to have to do PM. You need to unscrew the antenna, if possible, at its base, and you want to throw in some electric grease down on the bottom and screw that back into place. And then you want to conventionally grease the outside surface area. It's in the weather non-stop and they usually put some punky chrome stock piece in there It works for a while And this is also true of most everything else you got out there. Like I said, there's some really great sprays that are not gonna hurt reception, transmission, or anything. But what's really nice is they do a good job fluid film, or the PLS series of film type sprays, and there's dozens of others. So if you've got a shop and you've got something you're using, and you say, oh Mark, this'll work. You're right, it will, use it. If you got a source for something cheap, cheap, cheap, and it works, works, works, then use it. But the important thing is, remember, we've got to start husbanding even better. all of our equipment. This is when the first arrow leaves the bow. That's it for supply, guys. The tickle meter is now ticking down. Why? Well, other people aren't going to send us stuff if we can't pay for it, if the country can't pay for it, if the government hits a switch and does whatever. Commerce, as we know it, is done. Most of that commerce is overseas. It's not American, you know trade if possible. It's all overseas. Lots of ships coming this way full. No ships going outbound full. Lots of empty containers. Except for the scrap metal and materials that they're stealing from here. You know raw materials that were stupid enough to let go. So, again, this is why a lot of the aluminum is leaving the country where it should be staying in here. Aluminum is at an absolute top-end price right now. China's gotten past that point where they're willing to take our trash in return so that they can scavenge through the trash and make something out of it. They've apparently elevated their society above the level of India where they still try to find their wealth in the trash from other people. Find that that pony under that pile of manure Right remember that joke. Yeah, I know there's a pony here somewhere. That's exactly how they look at it Go ahead call her jump in there. Hey, thanks. I've got a partial communication. I was talking my buddy today. He said Sheriff Dar leaf having a breakfast meeting in a restaurant in Hastings Michigan tomorrow or Thursday morning at 1030. I don't have a location yet. We got dropped and I couldn't get back to him. I tried him before the show and he didn't answer so but he said also after that in the afternoon some rich guy is putting on a a barbecue, he's paying for all the food, it's like 20 miles west of Hastings, out by maybe Grand Rapids or something, but he said there's gonna be a barbecue free and it's a bunch of assembly groups getting together, trying to figure out their differences and how can they work together, you know, in this time today, where we need to be together. Anyway, I don't have any more information than that. I don't know if Sheriff Darr has a website or not where he might list that breakfast meeting on Thursday morning, but somebody might want to do a search on that. And, you know, I don't have a computer access. So anyway, that's all I got. Thanks. Very good. By the way, we'll have somebody give him a call while I'm doing a program. Maybe we can find out before the end. There are a series of meetings taking place that are like-minded this week all over the state as a matter of fact. Partially it's because we've had a number of people step up and report the activities around the state, individuals that are in the know that were part of those meetings, have already passed on information to the elected officials and say, hey, the bastards are planning something. Now, I think we, let's put it this way, the discussion that took place with at least two different locations had to do with the sheriff's office being asked if they could run the county lockup for two months without power. Now when asked well, when would this be taking place apparently? October was the window opening month October that the window there even that specific that all of that Cobra We're gonna have probably a power outage and everything will be down and whatever blah blah blah blah blah server supplies Well, you know, in October is when the kosher mafia is going to flip the economy. I mean, flip the, you know, they flip the budget and we've got all this other communist crap that comes up in October and from that point is the kickoff. So another thing that I would point out about this though, as the sheriff said, A, this is what the response I apparently is from local lockups that are, say, county and also city. is that they're not holding anybody hardly at all that could really be held. And so the response has been, no, they cannot maintain the county lockup for two months. So they would release the prisoners that they have in their custody. Yeah, they release them one way or the other, right? Pop, pop, boom, boom. Yeah, the county, well, the county's most likely to let them go because a good percentage are not. people that are relevant anyway to anything. I mean granted, under the fact they wouldn't have anything getting out, whatever the family has, and if it goes to, if the economy goes to hell in a handcart, nobody's gonna be in good shape if they haven't been, you know, putting, you know, putting something off to the side. However, let me point something out. Most people, most of you in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania don't realize, not all of you, some of you know this because you've been listening to the program, the feds house people in your state at the county level. In the Midland area, there are a number of federal prisoners who are being held in the county lockups under government contract. Why? Well, let me go back 15 years. I explained this all to you before about FEMA detention, you know, money in the FEMA detention camp system. I explained this 30 years ago, but the big wave of use it and the second wave of, you know, let's make the counties massive federal lockup extensions, which is part of the FEMA detention camp network for high custody Long or long indefinite detention prison facilities for maximum types. Okay, if you'll notice and every every county not or not can't say that almost every county in Michigan took the Fed hit money and Built new blocks that don't look anything like a traditional County lockup. Why? Because they're federally designed and they were designed to be isolation units with minimal manpower but maximum physical observation capability without electronics. So if you look, you probably don't, nobody pays attention much with the county sheriff does with the or the county does with the county lockup. But in almost everyone and you'll tell who it is that didn't get the tip money and who did. Imagine if you will the county lockup block for long term looks like an amphitheater Basically a quarter arc of a circle think about it that way from if you look at it from above and you have anywhere from three to the traditional and this is ancient four here like a slice of cake think four tiers of cake and The bubble is located obviously at the smallest point in the wedge your coming and going control points are located there. The bottom cells, typically left and right, are isolation. If you're already isolated in these cells, there is supplemental isolation, which is the equivalent to an internal hole. where you would be locked down 24-7. And typically these things, there's two ways that the design is set up. Number one, the cell itself is totally different, totally isolated from all the rest of the block, left and right, bottom tier. But there's a second pattern that has two chambers. It's really interesting in that this way they give you a technical out time. So in reality, you never leave the cell. But what they do is they open the internal door like an airlock and you go into the second chamber and that's your out time for one hour a day because they have to give you by law, by federal law, one hour of out time a day. Now, it's supposed to technically be where you can see sunlight, but what they do is they box in the second chamber with the same windows that are used for all of the other wall panels, which can be out of black sand, which make up the fascia point so they can see top and bottom, everything going out of the cell. The difference is the isolation cells, again, prevent the end of when they break the main block, these anywhere from two to four to six, they can even make the whole lower tier isolation if they want to. But we're not talking conventional solitary. It's more like isolation. You're a higher priority, but you're not in the other hallway where, again, basically the bang walls are. The big thing about this is that everybody received these and what's happened is this some counties Took more of that tip money than others because they were enticed by what well if you go back through the archives Not just here, but you can go back to the control media archives They were bragging up back in the arts but also before that in the in the 90s that well townships and counties and the Fed or the state forgive me state and could make money off the Fed by housing federal prisoners. You can make money off this. We're going to build a bigger prison system. And they did. Now, a lot of counties backed out of, in fact, Ohio, which had double the number of prisoners. Go back and look at the demographics for prisoner incarceration, the difference between Michigan and Ohio. Both Michigan and Ohio were on the same shipwreck route. Ohio, finally some quote-unquote conservative individual said, whoa, wait a minute. Well, look at all the titsuckin they're doing. What are the obligations under this? And somebody said, no, we don't want anything to do with that. So literally, the mission in less than a year was to cut down the population by half. So you have two parallel states, approximately the same size, with the same volume in terms of prisoners. at one point, which by the way, paralleled back when there weren't 54 prisons in Michigan and what was it, 62 in Ohio? They did beat us out a little bit with level one unsecure FEMA camp prisons. But the population was the same. And the first thing they did is, A, Ohio shut down all of the FEMA detention. Somebody finally figured out what they were. The level ones were quite prolific. Well, if you look, they're all cookie cutter, detention camp, pole barn type, you know, concentration camp buildings. Every one of them all same pattern all the same square space all the same originally for four prisoners to a cube for prisoners to a cell then it became Six prisoners to a cell then it became eight prisoners to a cell and the plan was to stuff 12 prisoners Into an area that originally was designed to accommodate for but had the ability to stuff 12 people. Well, guess what? In Michigan, they actually did that. In Ohio, they backed off. Now, they may still be doing it because what level one thema-type prison, level one secure, by the way, level one secure, difference between that and level one unsecure, obviously, you have words mean something. And all these were just FEMA mass detention camps on standby and that's how they concealed them. As we have explained to everybody, they can show you the pattern, the prints and the images. It's really straightforward. And this went from Florida to Oregon, from Maine to the bottom of California. And that big X in between, all the other states drank that Kool-Aid. Now the other half of this is the more permanent Standardized pattern blocks that the feds came up with told the counties what they were going to build. They built them for investment. And we now have a whole bunch of counties that most of you don't even realize this. You may have it happening in your county and you'd have to ask to see if it's happening because they don't make any announcements. But what this does is because they can anchor so many federal prisoners at the local level, who by the way, in the county lockup, you're only supposed to be in there for no more than a year. Remember, it's misdemeanors, there are no felonies. You might be, if you were charged with a crime, you will be retained obviously in your jurisdiction. Now this is another problem with what they did with the feds, is they've taken people out of their jurisdiction and posted them in another location as subcontractors. But the thing is that they're not in any way, shape or form maintaining the same standard as the federal facilities. If you don't know anything about jailing, this is why old people in jails or guys that are long, like say basketball scores, get real tired of the, you know, idiot six that come in and watch too many movies about how they think jail is supposed to run. And even the hype that's done by those is the way regales are really run. No, that's not. Most of what you see is designed purely to be propaganda because the first tool is fear. In reality, other than the system intentionally stirring the pot and the fact that people get pent up because they're in one place for, you know, one, three, ten, twenty years, that every once in a while they want to be a drama queen. It's basically a psychological response to physical condition. And those individuals can easily be identified if you're in lockup and you know who you're watching for. They have a tendency to, like for instance, they want to take a vacation if you're in lockup, one of the things you watch for. Is old Bob there kind of getting antsy? Well, if you want to take a vacation, what that means is you come up, you ride up on somebody and you stab them or you beat on them. And what you do is create an incident. Both of you go to the hole But, you know, Bob wants to go back up to say Mackinac in the Upper Peninsula because you get your own cell. The food initially comes to you. You don't have to go anywhere. You still get your hour out a day. And it gives you a chance to be away from everybody because in most cases, in most prison systems, you're stuck with two people. Now, it used to be it wasn't like that if you were behind the wall. If you were behind the old prisons, a lot of prisoners had their own cells. Most people don't realize that. Now, they were the size of your bathroom. And I'm not exaggerating, like I own you behind the wall, Jackson behind the wall, Marquette behind the wall. If you look at the original prison cell size, just picture a bunk bed in a cell, which by the way, you don't have another person, so it just gives you something to put stuff on. Usually there's not another mattress. But what they do is it's just wide enough so from the wall to the bed that you can move sideways back to where the toilet and the sink are. That's your cell. That's all the space you had. So when you hear the term behind the wall, don't think that, you know, even the spacious Hollywood bar, you know, the bar prison you see. Now, they were bar cells, but not the way you think they were. The old, the old prison was wicked. Go ahead. Shelby from OPC. I've got actually a court. I was just driving a little bit ago. This was around 4.19 central time. So just about 30 minutes ago. At the NBC Suites here in Oklahoma City, it's going to be, the address is 1815 South Meridian. That's 1815 South Meridian. That's the corner of Southwest 15th and Meridian in Oklahoma City. Just about two miles north of Will Rogers World Airport. I saw The FEMA command RV parked in the parking lot had the one of the satellite dishes up on top was set up behind the RV. It also had one of the expansion combos RVs you can expand out the side when you set up to make more room on the inside. I had one of the expansions on the driver side extended. And then behind it, it had a generator trailer that was parked behind it with the wires hooked up. Also, there was three white work trucks. These are the, I believe they were single cab pickup trucks. I'm not sure on the make and model. They have the, the, with the kind of the toolboxes on the side, but it's like one solid like camper shell with some windows and stuff and then has like I believe two doors on the back. like a normal truck, I don't know what they call those kind of camperchills. It's all one, I think it's all one package. It's all one module. It's actually, yeah, both the Fed and the cable services west of the Mississippi use that. It actually has reach-in shop boxes on either side, but it has a door channel in the center that goes through the middle of the vehicle, right? Comes in from the back. I don't know if it goes all the way to the cab. I mean, it comes in from the back. So it has a channel, you know, where the truck bed was so you can store other stuff in the center. But it also has the workboxes on both the driver and passenger side on the bed so you can access stuff on the side. There were three of those parts next to WDB. Let's see, like so the generator was hooked up with the water. I thought the water was hooked up. It wasn't like it was just parked behind it or they were just staying here overnight, one night or whenever the generators actually had wires hooked up on the side. And we're coming down and I couldn't see if they were going to the RV or whatever. It looks like there was possibly another train moving missile next to the generator. It could have been a fuel trailer, I'm not sure. So, as of right now, Mark, there is nothing. I mean, there is some tornado damage here in Oklahoma City, in Oklahoma. Like, so two weeks ago, we had some tornado damage in Hughes County, which is east of O.K.C. And it's about an hour's drive from O.K.C. There's also a Love County, which is south of Oklahoma City about an hour past drive. Then there's Murray County, which is an hour and a half, also towards the Love County. That's up to an hour. And then also last week we had a tornado up towards Tulsa, but that's the town of Barnesville that hit. And that's two and a half hours northeast of Oklahoma City. So there is nothing that I know about in Oklahoma City. There was some minor like F0 tornado damage, but I think for FEMA to be called in here in the Oklahoma City metro area. So I was just bringing this to your attention. Like I said, this was at the Embassy Suites in Oklahoma City. It's going to be off of Southwest 15th in Meridian. The address is 1815 South Meridian. The vehicles are actually parked on the north side of the hotel. So you can actually see them as you drive down 15th Street. That's how I saw them. Mark, I was driving by just about 30 minutes ago, and I actually saw them parked there. Like I said, there was the command RV with one of the satellites set up on top. I believe there's two of them. I'm pretty sure this is the communications satellite and not the just like the correct TV or whatever. And then they have, like I said, three white load trucks parked in front of the RV all back in together. And like I said, they have a generator trailer behind the RV with the wires hooked up. And any questions, Mark? Except the theme on the side. Very good. Again, the window of time you're talking about, now I'll just add this. We've had several reports, but one of them was on the road, I-94. Charlotte, Michigan, two black hawks landed near the expressway. Where they landed was out in the middle of BFE, no actual identifiable site. However, they were easily observed a white truck similar to the one that you just described was offloading cargo and there was also a semi truck. This was out in the middle of nowhere. Look for Charlotte, Michigan, easy to find. And again, They were offloading material from the semi truck and loading it onto the Blackhawks. The individuals that were operating the Blackhawks were all wearing black uniforms. That's not normal for any of the operatives here. So this is more like the skunk work groups that we ran into, and we've seen more than a few times here in Michigan. But it's about the same window of time. That doesn't mean it's right here in Michigan and Oklahoma. We're all connected. Well, they are, but in this case, There's activity, that's not the only one, there are other activities reported today all over the state, different types, and they're not normal activity. Remember, it's Tuesday. These events are not taking place near any regular training site or regular facility. They're on the road like this one here. Of course now they're in a hotel So they've deployed there for whatever reason and again, they're being housed there guaranteed You know Simpson put your female boys up in a cheap facility, right? Right. Yeah mark. I can get some pictures 15 20 minutes. I'm about to get off of it. So I'll be able to drive by the office and have some pictures of them And I can thank you the next hour and give you a little bit more details. And if like I said, we had a few tornadoes a couple weeks ago and not just the past week, but all of those disaster locations are over at least an hour's drive in any direction from Oklahoma City or more. So, I mean, it wouldn't make sense why you would have the RV set up, you know, in that unless you would go to the disaster, the worst one of all or whatever. have it set up there. They also have more than one of these. I believe the governor, I saw in his article, saying that he approved disaster relief for the president, the sign for disaster relief or whatever for people that was involved with the tornado and stuff. Like I said, all these locations are over an hour's drive from the city or more and in different directions. So it doesn't really make sense why they would be here in Oakland City. There's hotels much closer in all those different areas. But like I said, I'll get more pictures. Here's my next one. I'll put that in if I got any more. Maybe a little bit more updated report information on whatnot. Because I'll actually pull in the parking lot, get some pictures and whatnot. Unless you have any more questions or something like that. Thank you. And again, we'll cross notes because they took photographs of the other equipment and the basic truck that you described is the truck, the kind of equipment, it's something that the Fed purchased the cable companies did too. Typically these are single cab, they do have a cage control system as was pointed out, you know, does it go all the way through say to the cab up front? Typically they don't, they actually are secured so that you can open up a toolbox left or right. But you can't reach into the core which you access from the back door contact points. And I kicked myself in the ass because I had a chance to pick up a couple of these, you know, a few years back. And they were very reasonably priced. And I should have snagged them. I got one of the vans that was part of the fleet. But I didn't pick up the trucks. And if that basic model is used and is in the system, there actually are some just down the road in Lansing from the Supply point that we were just, you know, the Fox, Foxal PX. Couple of industrial truck sites down there and you can actually see a variant on the vehicle. But it is a government fleet type vehicle. And FEMA also, don't forget, regional, Homeland Security regional police, the regional police use this equipment. They all buy off the same fleet contract. This is true also with their sedans and or their SUVs. So, it's a good idea to take a look at and have reference because if you see that basic pattern, in the past they used to buy separate fleet contract vehicles. But back in the 90s, there was a significant change for control because the money is coming from the Fed, not just for FEMA, but also for state police forces that have prostituted or hoored out to the Fed and are now basically part of Homeland Succie-Ridey. And Homeland Sucky Righty does that control. So one of the things that they've done is that they subcontract the fleet of vehicles. So when the vehicles are even damaged, they have to be retained and they are surrendered back because they're basically under a lease program. And then they return into the bowels of the system for whatever purposes, probably to disappear underground or go overseas for some other arcane police force if they've got going on in whatever country that they're manipulating. Very likely because they're paid for. I mean they are actually all sitting there for a reason so. Pulling the old ones out. It used to be that most cities metropolitan areas had a two-year repurchase requirement per Police union contract don't know how many still have that but Part of that was next when the federal fleet program came into play and a lot of the big cities like Detroit Lansing, etc Although they have a choice to go either way, but if they do buy into the Fed fleet, then there are all kinds of special things they need to kowtow to. And so things have changed. You know, it's been a roller coaster, depending on the department and what part of the country you're in. Ohio, like I said, has changed dramatically. They've broken away in many ways from the Fed tit. I'm sure they suck on some others, though, quite nicely. We're at the top. We're going to hear the music. And we've had power outage two or three times. That's OK. We didn't lose connection. We've had some hiccups I can hear in the line that have come down from some of the storming going on off to the west and to the east. So again, we should hear the music. Ah, hear it. God bless the Republic. Death to the new world of you. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. And we're on the march, birthday and night. And by my World War I French bomber clock, which later was of course a U-boat clock, as you know, this little historical piece is kept perfect time. We will be back in a few minutes on regular schedule, I promise, provided we don't get disconnected right here. Liberty Tree Radio, it's Communications Tuesday. We'll be back. www.pokerface.com Totally relevant today, and yet it was written towards the end of the Vietnam War by Thailin Polk, a Vietnam veteran, wrote a lot of his poetry overseas while he was stationed in Vietnam during the war, came back to Holland, Michigan, put a whole book together, shared it all over the country. An Arizona Highway Patrolman in 1992 going on 1993 had gotten a copy of it. And in 93 when he saw America in peril, he went to a studio, took a visitor from the past. He was 27 years old. He was an Arizona Highway Patrolman in 1993. And he paid his own money to get into a studio and record that. And the first time that we heard that, Which was 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 Thelan Polk is the author the state patrolman remains anonymous For obvious reasons, but he did his part and he said a message 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 butt plopped there and their military service people. So for everybody out there listening, guys, watch your back. You know you're gonna get backstabbed 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, glorious. You have to have that nose up in the air, airhead 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 overbored. 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 said 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, 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. Well, 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 isn't 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 le peppy, peppy le pew. Yeah, everybody was wonders too 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 raccoon hats. Tomatoes 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 skin 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, you'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. There are processes. Learn things. That way you'll know what to do when the pepi le piu is available for the processing of mongu. 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 these 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 equivalent 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 personal 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? Show me from Oklahoma City. Go ahead. 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 how much they like refried beans But that's a good option. Of course also you mentioned the the herfords beef Ouch 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, I've 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. Grocery is 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 up 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. They're eight each in little packets 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 it's a 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. Walmart also has the little pouches of meat. They have like fajita chicken pouch. They're about $1.50 a pouch. Enough 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. It could be a preference, something we may like, but I didn't really care for it. 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 put together some meals and stuff that are, if you can't find any MRE, 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 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 keep an eye out, you know, if it's way past the best by date. But those are just some of my ideas, Mark, since you were talking about MREs and whatnot. Absolutely. We know real quick, Don. 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 tree 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 when you pick 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 a, it's 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 bare, I think it's bare creek since. They were pretty much just add water type suits. They have different types of suits. Some of them may have to add in every year or two. But for the most part, there's Bear Creek and then I can't remember. I think it's called Shore. And there you can find them on sales sometimes for about, well it used to be about $1.50. About $2.00 I think. Throwing things off at the round between $2.00 and $4.00 a pound. Oh, we're losing you a little bit. You got 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, we 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. One of the things that typically is missing is a dessert type item. That's what you would rate it as. We get goodies all the time. So here's a little trick too. 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 cores. 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. I mean, 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 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 help 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 most common complaints of being on a sea ration or a pack a can pack diet is a ticker pick 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 had, you know, well, I'm 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 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 freeze dried. Light weight, 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-filled purifier, et cetera. You figure out what works. And congratulations, you're gone. Move fast. Move swiftly, young messenger. It's your job. So, again, solutions, not just complaining about the problems. The MREs are fewer and far between, but what is out there was cheaper, but there are people who have been acquiring them, and now they're flipping them. And 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 dieu, 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 got to 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 Krapu, 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 in a can of something. I'll tell you what, rice and beans in 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 pallet of cheapest mackerel, buy a pallet of rice and a pallet of beans. And you know what? You're eating pretty stinking good, better than most of the planet. I said pallet. I know guys that that's what they did for their two-year supply. They walk out, had sources, a pallet of mackerel, pallet of beans, pallet of rice. And the rice was Asian rice. So very different from the dry land flat rice that you know 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 and 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 click up what I reported. I'll go over it again, like I did in the last hour. So I spotted this 419 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. 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 a 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 PV set up. 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 winches on the front, and the other one did not, but they have the box trailer, or boxed 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 on 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 parking lot. 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 smaller type communication or tracking along with a smaller antenna or whatever for mobile radio or whatever. But 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 I close box on top of the white SUV. Next to the generator that had the wires up it for the trailer was just another medium small box trailer parked right next to it. And let's say again, like I said I mentioned before, the only disaster sites that are going on we had some 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 towards Tulsa. So all these areas that have some tornado damage that possibly FEMA would go to are 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. 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 like that 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 on the news section with the pictures and whatnot. Unless you have any questions. 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. 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 you come. 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, yeah, go ahead. You with me hearing we got you. Okay, I kind of change subject. I look is Would you say I'm of the opinion that we 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, who does, we look at the Democratic Party and they're like, 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 training 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 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? To 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 Judaica, 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 Judaica, 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... Lots of greenest people! Yeah, well, yeah, matzah. But what's in, no, but remember, okay, why only that location? See, ask basic questions, guys. Think about it. There's a million other places. You got Jewish bakeries. There's some that produce matzahs 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 matzas 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 where we need to focus on. Do you think the world's jewelry is conspiring to return back to what is that? They always have. They're going to go back. 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. 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. Yeah, that's what they're doing. I can smell the replacement. I knew that was the start. 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, I think the Democratic Party likes that one. I think NATO likes that one too. Yeah, but okay, well the Democrats aren't the only ones involved in this because there's a whole bunch of Republicans rats who are so far up the Israeli's ash, you couldn't pull their head out with a crowbar if they're life depended on it. Thank 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, the towel routine. And in comes this guy that looks like Aquilon. I'm serious, you look like he like from Jeff Rottels. 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 a a prostitute shop business card a color back in the day. This is big money. Here'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 outright, 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 and 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. Washington DC 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 claim. You know, what we look at... When there are no clean, look in World War II, scrape the thing clean. Paris, forget Paris. It's still a new capital, a new location. That's the 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 the Ukraine? And remember 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 going to get out of the way for now, though. God bless our Republic. Yes, over and over again. Which means to remember that little thing about the hulan, hygwan, hanklang, you know, lab leek. How about instead it is Israeli operated out of the Ukraine? This latest bird flu scam? How about it's been operated out of the Ukraine and the idea 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 jogging 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 again 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've been doing a program and communication has been up and down with everything else So we'll see what happens and again, God bless. We'll see you one hour. This station is powered by Sam broadcaster visit spatial.com to start your own station Ladies and gentlemen, this is the first hour of the intelligence report. I'm Mark Cornke, one day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories. Mark, something's wrong with your audio. We can barely hear you. Contact us. Again, let's try this one more time with battle acts in hand, so to speak. Hold on just a minute. We're still playing with the technology here. It's not an Ed's end, it's at this end. You know, it's been a perfect day today, but everything tech-wise is just bollocksing up. So, you know, it's planet crapoo 21st century. Most of the money goes to hyphen Tel Aviv and piss on America. So that's where we are. Good. Let's start right from the beginning. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the first hour of the Intelligence Report. I'm Mark Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories East South Northwest and West Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com LibertyTreeRadio.org And we're on satellite. I want to say hi to all our merchant marine operators out there, even those that are in war zones, virtually run every body of water on the planet right now, both in analog and digital, and both just direct listening and multiple repeat slash bridging systems. I want to say thank you to all of our friends out there. It's been a busy weekend and you guys, of course, have a busy day ahead of you if you're on water right now. It's constantly a keep it, you know, keep it afloat project. Anyway, we're also in a myriad of other communications technologies both inside and outside these United States. And it is, well, it's Monday. It's obviously Monday. It's been Monday all day. It is the 13th of May. May the 13th. Well, that means absolutely nothing. Well, it's Monday. Anyway, it is the 16th year of open, obvious, and in your face. Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K 2024 Old Earth calendar 2024 battle for the Republic The dance of the swords let the dance continue. We're gonna make sure that happens. In fact, we're the ones playing the music people and It's been a busy weekend. Well, of course, it's the end Well, good sidebar entertainment to go up to the Foxhole PX in Lansing, Michigan. But Friday was pretty busy, so I didn't make it up here until Saturday. For any of you who did, hopefully you're the guys who were clearing the boots out. I know a lot of different people who have showed up up there that were with our particular interest groups. But on Saturday they closed their doors 100 years and actually more than 100 years as a surplus store and Finally going out of business. So took advantage because my personal fun Going up there. They had uniform tops and bottoms for a dollar a piece And I told everybody trying to get up there to get them. There are still a quantity that are left on the shelf So to speak those may be available in a post-mortem kind of situation. We'll find out more. We may be uninformed. We'll see what happens. But again, watch for situations like this and cherry pick. That's what we do all the time. Again, you can outfit an entire force for pennies on the dollar if you cherry pick from all the different sources that we do have. around the country. Don't forget you got SportsmansGuide.com, SportsmansGuide.com, Coleman's.com, GunpartsCorp.com. This is just many, many, many, many others. Depending on our interest for the day and what our subject is, I'll reference those many, many times over for obvious reasons because they are useful. We're trying to take advantage of useful. In this case, we get a lot of useful that we're still needing to Acquire to dot the I and cross the T on the projects that we are facing here organizing as many different new up-and-coming militia forces. This is where you have to be patient. We have actually seen a, I don't know, what you call a quadrupling of processing in with regard to organizing Army equipping and training militia. One of the biggest problems is people well people are expecting a certain amount of guidance But the most important thing is as you've heard from me a million times centralized control Kills and we don't really have an interest in all of that for the moment fire teams and squads fire teams and squads Fire teams and squads a million of those organized any any two fire teams Together making up a squad can work within their own domain And even if you take another squad, another 10-man squad from a totally different training or theology and you put them together, if they understand that they're working in a fire maneuver situation, those two squads within their own domains will function fallously and can work together in gaining an objective, preparing defenses, operating in whatever necessary way. Because the straw boss, the fire team and squad leaders, The squad leader, of course, takes care of the management within that 10-man team. They've already worked on the education. Tweaking and balancing out the difference requires only two minds, squad leader one and squad leader two. The rest of the activity when each squad can be totally different, but will be totally interactive and supportive of the main objective. So again, it's more critical that we have as many small unit formations organized tightly right now And again, here's where the big argument is. Well, it's an eight-man squad. No, it traditionally has been a 10-man squad, but we carved it down because we're short manpower and the vehicles we're using, we have to cram fewer people in because we crammed more junk in that we didn't necessarily need on the vehicle, but it was altered. An example is the Bradley. Hey, it works. It's what you got. It's what you're going to be capturing. It's really running into a lot of... Get over it, live with it, it's just how it works. Meanwhile, there's other technologies or equipment that is available. All of that will be manning also. So don't worry if there's plenty of different MOSs, military or in this case, militia, occupational skills, that will be required. Everybody will find their niche. Although I will say this, remember you're all infantry first because it comes down to taking real estate or keeping real estate. And that means you've got to have boots in place to do it. All the technology up and down the kaleidoscope of killing machines doesn't make any difference if you don't have the manpower, if you don't have the ass to back it up. So again, this is why it's especially critical that you organize first as a person, then as a team. Ideally, again, even two of you are a doubling of force, but force multiplying your ability to fight. Don't think that you've just doubled your strength because you found another person you're working together. No, no, no, no, no. There's a significant difference in being able to work as a two-man team as opposed to a gaggle of individuals who kind of just waddle around in a general direction but don't have any clue about how to cooperate or work together. So every militia formation that develops itself is already ahead above most of the rest of the threat. Understand that. and at the very least in equity. You'll have to develop, you need to develop your skills, you are going to have to try to master the trade, and we've talked about this many times. Most of it's going to be a combination of self-taught and OJT. Now there's all kinds of philosophies of schools out there for that five-man fire team and eventually that 10-man squad. There's all kinds of debate about it. Guess what? We'll find out in the wash. But one neat thing about having diversified training is we're also not predictable in a battlefield situation in a war where intelligence collection is of course considered to be premium The idea that one cookie-cutter format works for everybody It doesn't exist, but that's not going to work So again be creative and yes think think think in a different direction is always The philosophy of the far of the squad real quick During World War II, as I've pointed out many times, the Marines had a three-man fireteam element with a team leader slash a squad leader, 10-man. They could attach or reattach part of the weapons section any time they choose to. Now, what was the Marine Corps combination here? A rifleman, an automatic rifle, and a submachine gun or a carbine-type weapon. creating a small little three point combined arms team. Think about that. And again, in each one, there was a rifleman, a marksman. In each one, there was an automatic rifle, a BAR or a Johnson rifle, a Johnson automatic weapon, not the Johnson rifle. And then separate from that was either a ricin or a Thompson, depending upon what unit and how much equipment was available. The Marines were thin like everybody else in the beginning of World War II. Did they change this? Yes, they did. Everybody changed up during the conflict, started out one direction, moved in another, and then reconfigured based upon progressive experience and changes in the enemy threat and how the units had to operate and how they had to deploy. So again, it still hovers around the 10-man squad almost always, and I would point out the best way to explain it is this. You have a squad with you all the time. If you understand the basic members of the squad, look at your, take your two hands, lay them out in front of you, flat palms up. What's really making us unique is that, you know, the way we have that opposing thumb which offers so much control. Well, the four fingers on each hand are your infantry and your basic rank and file personnel, no matter what skill or specialized weapon they're carrying. The opposing thumb which makes this hand work is the team leader. One mind for one hand, but both hands are controlled by the same mind. Each hand can be given a different task or has a mutual interest in an objective, and so they will move forward and overlap in coordination. One hand, four fingers opposing thumb, fire, it's a fire team. The other hand, four fingers opposing thumb, that's the other fire team. It's fundamentally relatable all the way down to your the your infancy. This is especially critical with regard to operations and is something that everybody needs to be taking into consideration now That's basics. We're almost to the bottom of the hour here route 20 minutes after I would remind you also that Before we're going farther Palmetto state armory calm Palmetto state armory calm PalmettoStateArmory.com. They have finally released as of the beginning of the month, which is now 13 days ago. Two weeks ago, guys. May is two weeks old. They introduced their American-made, made by Palmetto State Armory in their own arsenal, in their own ammunition plant. 7.62x39 Boxer Primed Ammunition. This is Steelcase, but Boxer Prime. It has a special finish. I think you're calling it Soviet Slick, and it's a trademark. Don't know what the finish is. I haven't had a chance to talk to them, but I would be curious because it is, it's actually registered trademark, Soviet Slick. Now, if I'm wrong, I'm pretty sure I got that right, but if I'm wrong, you can correct me on it later. The interesting thing is that the ball ammunition is sold out immediately. the saber black tip. Now this is not black tip AP. Whenever we use that term there's a problem because most people immediately would say, oh black tip AP. They're using the term black tip but in reality it's a basic whatever variant nossler bullet. It is a jacketed bullet that is a hollow point that has a aerodynamic insert made out of polymer. It can be on any number of different Density, malleability, ratings, I assume it's relatively coarse. But the idea behind this is that A, it helps to increase performance downrange, but when it does impact, its second purpose is to help to hydraulically open up the hollow point. It actually does work in two different steps of the process of the bullet and its operation. They may be out of the saber by now too. If you go to palmettoastatearmory.com, you'll be able to identify that, and it's the 7.62x39. Now, I've had several conversations yesterday on the subject, well, you know, or actually, you know, speculating, are they going to crank up more 7.62x39? Well, I would if I were them. I would, in fact, I would assume that they're already doing that, that they're cranking out more of the 7.62x39. However, understand that they have purchased all of the technology to do 545 by 39 and this is going to be a 100% American production top to bottom. It's going to be boxer primed. It's going to be non-grocive obviously. Again it's a steel case with a boxer primer. The finish is going to probably accommodate more reloading options in terms of how many times you can reload the case. Now, here's something to consider there. Remember, if you shoot a round, you try to keep your rounds, your weapons and rounds separate when you're shooting so that you can accumulate the brass that you fired in a particular weapon. It's fire form to that weapon. This makes resizing a lot easier. In most cases, you only need to do a throat, shoulder, and partial case. You don't have to do a whole reforming of the case. And this saves wear and tear on the dies for the long haul if you're doing tens and tens and hundreds of thousands of rounds, which we do. We don't fire our factory ammo except for minimally to acquire the brass that we need, the reloadable brass, for reloading and then all of your training ammunition from that point forward should be least expensive, simplest performance, baseline performance load, whatever it is. If it's 38 special, 9mm, 40 caliber, 45 ACP, 357 Magnum, 44 Magnum, etc etc, and pistol. If it's rifle, go right through the spectrum, top to bottom. You want to go mid-load, but if you're training, you can actually... Now this is something I've talked about before. Wheel down a few points on the reload chart. and save a significant amount of powder while still ending up with a reasonable training load depending upon the range point of contact. and the project for the ammunition at that time. Example, if you're working in urban warfare training cycle, you can reduce your ammunition. You don't need the full potential. You'll still get the basic performance out of the round. And what you have to do is experiment to see where a deficiency might take place if you drop down the scale so many notches. Remember, if you go to your reloading books, you have a scale chart. Notice how many different options there are. This identifies both bullet powder charge and primer etc etc, but most important is bullet combination versus powder charge There are other bullets and projectiles you can use example if I were you I would try to find if you're running a 30 caliber carbine Plink stir projectiles Plink stir everybody made them at one time Who has them left in inventory? I don't know But they are a 90 grain or 92 or 93 grain, depending on who made them and what year they were made. Semi-jacketed round. They are an optimal, minimal cost solution to be able to shoot your M1 carbine a lot more. Now you can also cast 30 caliber bullets and copper plate them. You know lead can be plated very simple process But what it does is it reduces the leading in the system, which is especially important with your gas operated weapons But it can be done with the carbine because again nature of the projectile loadings, etc So going back to Palmetto, they're going to at some point go to five four five They've also said they're going to do seven six two by fifty four are This is a good thing because this is going to fill a niche and provide an alternative to what is a diminishing inventory of surplus because of the number of conflicts taking place overseas. The other thing is that they will eventually do 300 blackout, which is another good performance round. We all know the issues of keeping track of which gun uses which in terms of ammunition. Remember that your AR-15s can have a golf bag full of uppers. literally only one lower and you can actually have five, you know, six, seven different chamberings that you can slap with the upper receiver on the lower. So you're never going to technically run out of ammunition in the cycle of a conflict or say future survival issues. In one point or another, you'll still have something to shoot. So anyway, ideas, not just complaining about the problems, anybody can whizzy, whine, piss, and moan, and we're tired of that BS. In fact, there's a lot of people still wasting time on that. Most important is, again, the bad guys are in motion. Going to war in 24 is pretty obvious, and again, if we assume the worst, we won't be disappointed. So, in fact, it's not the worst. It's really needed. We can't go with this. Can't go any farther with this. There's not any aspect of what's happening that can be considered acceptable. So, it's not an if, it's just a when conflict will develop. Gas masks. Get a gas mask, get a gas mask, get a gas mask. Remember, the basic mask, nothing has changed for 100 years, just about. Contrary to everybody who's been told, the biggest thing is filters. That's the change. So most basic masks will serve to one degree or another. All masks would serve for a nuclear threat because inhalation of fallout is our first concern. And it's obvious that they're pushing for a nuclear exchange. Now that means that with mushrooms and marsh gas being dispersed in the battlefield environment, that those of you who are prepared with full range NBC capability and the backup and support are ahead of the curve. Gas masks have become more stupid price and expensive depending on which model. If you can't find any surplus technology, I will remind you again Grainger or any number of other PPE, safety equipment companies. Anybody who has personal protective equipment in their inventory and Grainger has a massive collection. You can find what you need there, but you will pay regular over-the-counter retail prices. And you will pay for a new product, which is acceptable, not a problem. And many people do this anyway because they do have the money. Not all of us do. The big thing here again is that there are options. Go ahead, call your champion there. Midway has, Midway, the reloading place. They have the M10M kit, the mask with the filters and the bag, 25 bucks. That's not that's not three for twelve like it used to be but well, you know We'll take it at 25 instead of 150 for what you're going to pay for commercial over And that's a now that does it have the bag Has the kit? Yes Yes, it's the standard kit that we used to get for 12 bucks. Excellent. But still, $25. These are ones with the cheek pouch filters. These are not the screw-on filters, guys. These are copied. What's the US copy? It's copied in the US model. M17. It's got the cheek filters in it, which are kind of difficult to get in and out. You need to get yourself somewhere for four, five, six hours. I think they'll serve you really well. And you've got to take it off and have somebody change the filters out later. That's great. They want $7.50 a set for the cheek filters. They do come sealed in foil. I've got a bunch of them previously. Oh, way long ago, we paid like $1.50 a month. But that's not the case anymore. Yeah, when surplus was more reasonably, you know, acquirable. The big thing here again is the M10M is Czech. Now two other countries in the Warsaw Pact were using the M10 in one variant or another. One of them was East Germany, so they're all gone. They're pretty much out of the system. I don't know who has them. They might see them pop up in the rent revolution market here with surplus pretty soon. But nobody is coming off the equipment for the most part. Now the M10M has a dual intake system and it is a sealed filter system. The logic behind this was that you were only supposed to be in the environment for so long and then you were supposed to withdraw, cycle personnel forward, the others would decontaminate. And it's true that actually in most cases their logic was that hopefully cross your fingers and don't make a mistake and count on the supply system. that they would actually just replace the mask. They'd just drop everything into the decon bag, the contaminant bag, and switch out to new. Now that wasn't your first preferred choice. So again, there was a whole process for cycling the M17 on our side, or the M10 with the Chex. And let's remember the Chex were the gold standard in the Warsaw Pact, and actually it's argued even all of Europe, for nuclear biological and chemical defense and employment also by the way, not just you know defense but offense. Now that's why they were bought as a group for Desert Dust Part 2, the adventure continues. Remember they wanted that coalition of people that worked together. They brought the checks in because of the supposed chemical biological threat that was probable and radiological would be just as likely. So, the equipment that you're seeing here, this is what the Cheques were using. The M10 was still in service when Desert Dust II continued, but many other service masks were available to Czechoslovakia. Go ahead. What surprised me back then was that the Cheques were even brought in by the NATO, well, the US, the US, NATO, slash whatever. I was surprised that they came in because they had just come out of the Soviet block a few years prior. Over. Exactly, but they needed the money. So I am sure that somebody got paid well for the rank and file that they provided. The important thing is that they specialized in detection and needless to say, the very things we're talking about, decontamination and processing. So this equipment is serviceable enough. And all, as I will say, any mass that's out there, pretty much it's in the system. Step one, does it protect against nuclear? Yes. Period. All of them do. Because with the radiological threat, your concern is inhalation of fallout. It's not fallout hitting your skin. That can be protected to a degree with slick side suits or chem suits that are the standard membrane type. But it's the process of the nuclear fallout goes into your lungs. You have VLI collected. They transfer it into the circulatory system. It goes to the lymph nodes. You die. That's a simple formula. So what do we do? Well anything and in fact I would even say that if you didn't have a mask the first thing you do is cover your you know cover your face cover your mouth T-shirt anything why because most of the fallout is going to be heavier particle it does it mean you're probably gonna suck something in Probably but that's why you should have a gas mask instead Now here's the most important thing about gas mask if you use them in a radiological threat there is no fixing the filter. Okay, not that there is with biological or chemical, but let's remember that with radiological, we're concerned with RAD buildup, we're worried about radiation. So you get a cumulative threat, which means the filters need to be gone. Yeah, and don't throw them in the fire, because you'll just breathe them in later or someone can wind well. Right, we're just going to send them back where they yes going to come right back in your face literally, okay? So in this case the filters with a radiological threat go into the biological chemical and nuclear decontamination hazard bags and Then they're moved away accordingly no which is mean you still have a hazard and there's all the other issues How do you get rid of that well again the half-life on the fallout is limited remember that two weeks most of it's done So, again, step A, we're preventing it from entering the body. Step B, we're not going to keep it near the body so you get irradiated in some other way. So, the radiological threat, in that respect, you could isolate it, you could set it off to the side. The decay rate is pretty high. There are some particles that are going to hang for a long time, but nothing by comparison to the short-term high burst issue that you have to deal with. And that's dying. That decay is taking place as soon as the weapon has been activated and the reaction has taken place. It's already dying. It's going to be progressively day by day less, but we don't want it in front of our face. I don't think we need to be worrying about teeth falling out later because we kept going, I'm going to keep the mask on. If you have to, again, we will, but we want to make sure we take the, if we know we've been in a threat environment, and here's what's really good about radiological, all of the ability to read the threat is off the shelf. You can go to the very company I was just talking about, Grainger, I've bought Tons of stuff for the good old University of Michigan for radiological and chemical detection. You have to have a certain amount of PPE for labs and such and because of this Again, there's a wide spectrum also. Now you can go to China Sport and for most of what you would need to do, for instance, if I want to confirm, okay, I suspect when we went through that dust cloud that it wasn't just a dust cloud, people, that we had some fallout in there. Well, guess what? You don't have to guess. You pull out the meter reader. Oh, you're right, Bob. Yeah, you're right, Bob. We got it. So what you do is you carry it for a short period of time. You go through your evacuation of the filter but not the mask. If you're familiar, we can't do this on the air, I could walk you through it, but I don't think I need to. You'll learn soon enough about operating the mask if you look at all the resources available out there. But the fact is that you just break the filter, drop the filter, and again, all the filters go into the hazards bag. then you install, you drop the one immediately, install the other, filter is screwed into place, pull the cap, and again you're ready to go. Once you've done the same basic clearing you would do is if you donned the mass to a degree, just not as radical. So you can change the filter on the fly. That's something that has been normal. With biological and chemical we don't have so much the issue of Any kind of through the mask threat per se, but we certainly don't want to cross contaminate. So there's a whole separate issue there. The key point is still having the gas mask. So again, over at Midway, that's over at Midway, right? Forgive me, I have to make sure I get that right. That's Midway. Roger. Okay, good. Midway has been around a long time and by the way the other thing about Midway is you do have to kind of search the page. Sometimes it's tweaky but look at the weird corners of the place. It's worth it to go take and sit down in an afternoon or a night when you got time and go from top to bottom through Midway because their page has always had little hollows and places where wow I didn't know they had that. And their descriptions are not the best as far as being thorough descriptions. So if you see something there, go and check it out somewhere else, especially if they're paying more elsewhere. And confirm though it's the same item. Over. Exactly. The one thing here again too is now this is a good set. That's Midway. But in addition, remember Sportsman's Guide has gas masks, even Bud Kay has gas masks. Well Mark, are they any good? Yep, they're just as good as anything else that NATO's wearing. And to be quite honest, as I will tell you again, nobody, nobody has ever fully retired a gas mask that's been in service within the last 50 years. This is the year 2024. That puts that at 1970. Guys, that's not ancient. Oh, it's ancient by some younger people's standards, but the bottom line is from military perspective, if you went up there to, for instance, Foxwell PX, he actually had the transport storage systems on the shelf for the M9 gas mask. It's an actual clamshell that covers the mask. Guys, those things originally were in their own sealed tins. much of the equipment once it's been put into nitrogen pack storage or vacuum storage depending upon what era, what system and what the equipment is, it's good indefinitely. Okay but again with the quality of the products over the last 50 years and considering that most countries don't make their own nuclear biological and chemical defense technology, they don't. They buy off the rent a revolution slash surplus industry market at the international level. And the quantities are vast. So your first competition with all the equipment we're talking about are other countries. And then it's your fellow Americans or whoever else is buying the stuff out there which includes Canadians and even Mexicans and everybody else. Because surplus is surplus. And it's interestingly enough as I pointed out, many of the rent a revolution slash surplus companies will not sell to the American people, but they will sell to every third rate mass murdering dictator on the planet. We've dealt with the importers for years, and England is notorious for that. They consider the American people to be an enemy of England, to be a combatant. For that reason, they don't dump any of the deep quantity of equipment they have. Now, we've had people that have brought stuff in that have been importers. and they have been attacked by the government in England and told, you don't send anything to them. You don't sell gas masks to them. You don't sell anything to them. And it's interesting talking to one of the importers years ago, it's like he said, Mark, you wouldn't believe it. I could sell to any other dictator on the planet, but I can't sell to the American people. People I've known personally, in fact, they brought whole arrays of what was available through the surplus system from England. And it is vast. The inventory is vast. And they don't care. But they do care because their perceptions are going to be fighting us. The NATO is going to be fighting us. NATO slash NATO, when you say NATO, remember that's U.N. So what's out there is what's out there. Is the M10 the first best choice? Well, it's as serviceable as anything else. Now, here's the one thing about the M10 and the M17 family of masks. Because the filters are on both sides, you have this expansion away from the face. The M9 and many of the other masks that have very specific, you know, left-centered filter systems, left-mounted filter systems, means that you can actually get a reasonable cheek weld and better alignment. Unfortunately, with the M17, you have to work the weapon to be able to accommodate sight alignment. Now, the one thing that's helped that a little bit are optics. But with iron sights, and typically with everybody falling back on iron sights, no matter what optics you have, eventually you run out of batteries. That's not an if, that's just a when. And the government won't, you know, the military won't get them where they need them to be in a real wartime situation, not a police state action. or a regional minor action where they can filter as they need to. When you're talking an all-out war, as soon as this conflict starts, everything shuts off. All the supply system and even the rarest way that you can imagine will not exist. especially everybody keeps talking global, but everybody thinks television screen or cell phone. And that's not what we're talking. Time and distance, that formula is never going to change. Time and distance. So the more trinkets you have, and if you want to use them, the more spares you personally need. And if you think the supply system is going to get it to where it needs to be, remember this. You get into a war, all merchant marine is a target. All aircraft are a target. You want a world war, if you're in a world war, everything is a target of opportunity. And most of it, let me give an example. You can go out and down, a whole half a mile or so, or less, anywhere in points of the Atlantic, someplace deeper, you won't dive yourself. You can go all over the Atlantic and there's all kinds of merchant marine ships where you can see racks of Thompson still sitting in the racks in the ships in deep water, sitting there in the salty brine, never fired a shot in anger, but they were weapons of war. And they were headed to war and they went straight out over the horizon and then with one U-boat they went straight down and all the cargo with them. So for every gun that made it over, there's a gun that didn't make it. For every pound of food, there's a pound of food that ended up fish food. And as far as flying it, well, you won't be any better off in the air because air defense is going to do its job and also the hunter-killer operations on both sides dictate that it's a free-for-all. So all of this idea, these ideas, that we're just going to reach over into the shelf there and pull off a no-you're-not. You'd better be ready. You better have the right mindset here and know how to build your own. Most important is know how to build your own. And on that note with power, don't forget Edison batteries. The Chinese are making Edison batteries, but there's a company in Montana, as I understand, that is making an American copy of the traditional Edison These are completely rebuildable over and over and over and over and over again. They're good for an indefinite period of time. Most important is that they are, again, great for static operations in remote locations, very durable. They were already proven out. In fact, Edison did everything he could to break the battery, destroy the battery, damage the battery before he marketed it. so that the product he finally fielded, if you copied the Edison pattern battery, guys, it will literally run forever. They were iron-based, weren't they? Yeah, and interestingly enough... Not too hard to come by iron these days, is it? No, as a matter of fact, remember what he did is he built the first battery, had the guys bring it in from the lab, the prototype, he looked at it, tested the power, walked over to a stairwell, and walked up one half flight of stairs to the first floor window and threw it out the window and it broke. He said, pick it up, take it back to lab, figure out what failed, now build it so it won't. Now the story goes that they did that, exactly, that team was working on one project, it wasn't his only project, it had many others in the works. Well they came back with the second prototype. He looked at it. He tested it. Capacity was correct. Everything worked. It did what it was supposed to. He walked up to the second floor and threw it out that window. And of course it broke. It did some kind of damage. He said, look at it, see what's wrong with it, make it work. It came back a third time. He took it up to the highest point of the building, in this case apparently no more than the third floor. I don't know if it was just off the roof or not. And the last time he threw it, well, let's see if it breaks. Didn't break that badly, but whatever needed to be reinforced. What he was doing is every time that they broke it, they reinforced it where they saw that it needed to be. Now, I'm sure he probably threw more than one out the window, too. I mean, the story goes that he just threw that one out, and they said, okay, now make that work right. But in the end, The battery that he came up with was designed to have the snot beat out of it. And it's interesting to note that it was the battery's first use was for electric high lows. Anybody know that electric high lows were around back in 1900, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, 19, But amazingly enough Edison's Edison built these batteries for electric high lows that were being that he was making but in addition to that where the battery truly shined is it electrified our communication system and all of both the Telegraph and later the telephone systems of the United States Ran off of Edison battery packs that were stationed all up and down the system all through the circuit And again, survived 30, 40, 50 years of abandoned in place abuse where they were not taken care of. And in most cases, even after 30 and 40 years of being abandoned in place, 80% of the batteries that were found in most all of these little niches and grooves and service centers all over the country still retained their power. And even when they were thrown into recycling, like into steel yards. where somebody was scrapping them, or at least somebody was going to scrap them and the guy who got them said, they just took them into those steel tables over there. So the Edison battery is something that we should be looking at as A, we need an example of B, we just need an example to copy. Once we have the copy, it is a product that could be produced in 1900. That wasn't the age of you know rocket science, you know the rockets rocket science, but it was getting close But not quite but it still was the age of engineering So we need to understand how it was built We need to take a look at the specs and that's what we need to focus on as an alternative Coming back up from the disaster that's being created by the globalists right now Do we lose access to the one that Monahan knew Captain Manahan had when he died did we lose that access? He had about eight of them. We have I think one that we can access But there are still here. There are yeah But again, he had eight at the time originally the eight that he picked up from the yard that we were talking about Where they did that he did the test the guy had And unless that person is dead, which I don't think he is, and the yard has been torn up badly, interestingly enough, the yard is still pretty much there, the scrapyard. So we probably could access the rest of those. It's just one of those million projects that what we need to do is take the time. Because the batteries themselves are crude. They're incredibly reliable, but they are incredibly crude, which is fantastic. No, they're not a lithium battery, but you know what? We powered the whole of the country with a lot less than the equivalent to the output of one nuclear reactor powered generator station. The entire output of the country was no more than the equivalent to one regular, only one power plant. system of a multi-head power plant system that you would see like any reactor site or with a coal burners or etc because they don't want just one system. Imagine we powered all of the country. We're able to elect that that's the output of the whole country and we're able to bring the country into the electrical age So we could be more efficient. We're not we're not very efficient right now contrary to what everybody says and all the global freak BS about you know climate scam change, etc They're not trying to be more efficient. In fact, just reverse. They're being very inefficient It's intentional there. It's the same old money bag screwing the population so that they can put everybody under their heel You heard the story about the Vast solar array in India that was a floating array the largest one on the planet It experienced the wrath of Mother Nature Approximately 31 mile an hour winds and it destroyed the whole thing. Oh God I've got a cat that could lean into a 30 mile an hour wind. Well, I should tell you something about, let's just say, what it was supposed to, how it was supposed to perform, and probably what it was built of and how it truly performed. It looked good on paper, and it really probably looked good in terms of the specs, but the sub sub sub sub sub contractor that Izzy Blatsenstein hired,
Recordings of The Intelligence Report are the intellectual property of Mark
Koernke and the Patriot Broadcasting Network, used with permission. The content
present in these recordings and the resulting transcripts are the opinions of
Mark Koernke and do not represent the opinions of the Koernke Archive, its
owners, or its service providers. This website, transcript, and summary content
has been generated with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence tools, and may
contain errors.