Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome Preppers, new preppers, old Patriots and sheep dogs. Just
Bonzi prepping. I'm Bonzai and welcome to the bunker. Yes
we have. We have run back to like one of
the smaller studios because Ms Bonzi is back in town.
So you know, we can't take over the big house
(00:22):
all the time, you know, until we get the new
the new studio built, which looks like they're gonna start
construction January. The beginning of January should be done by marches.
So when that happens, then we won't be the red
headed step children out in the back in the dog house.
We'll be inside the big house with actual bathrooms. And
(00:44):
you know we don't have to water the trees outside
at night. Yep, you know tonight is going to be
myself Bonzi. We've got Booboo in the house and Twitch.
We decided to say, hey, Twitch, come on in. Uh
he's my boy, and you know he's going to represent
(01:05):
kind of gen Z in a way. I mean he's
age wise, he's gen Z. He was born in twenty ten. Yep.
Actually he's pushing gen Alpha. That's like he is actually yeah, yeah,
you know, because my daughter is like first year of alpha.
She was like thirteen. But they're both being raised pretty
much gen X, you know, which is good. But I
(01:28):
get to see the blend of the gen X teachings,
which they both seem to love. Yeah, but they're surrounded
at school by their peers that are definitely z's and alphas.
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
My dad was a boomer, right, and your dad was too. Yeah,
So we were raised by boomers, which is crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
Which is kind of how and why we are the
way we are because I know, I think after World
War Two and the Korean War, I think, really, it's
not that they gave up. It's more like they just
didn't care, you know, And that's why we were latch
key kids.
Speaker 2 (02:13):
And you know, it's it was just like we have
so much freedom.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Yeah, it's like you figure it out, you know. I mean,
I remember I was twelve years old, you know, eleven
years old, walking home from school two three miles, getting
home to an empty house because both parents worked. By
the time they got back it was five o'clock. I
was getting home at like two thirty three o'clock, you know,
and I'd make myself something to eat, do my homework,
(02:40):
any chores I had to do, be before they got back.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
You know, it wasn't you got to switch and.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Yeah, you know, it was just helped. Was so we
learned early how to be self sufficient. Yeah, you know,
which I've tried to you know, get you know, like
our kids, like my daughter, she she turns twelve at
the end of the month, and she cooks by herself already,
you know which I mean. Granted us gen xers, some
(03:09):
of us brag that, oh, at five years old, I
was cooking rice and beans myself or whatever, you know,
which for some true, some was true. But for the
most part now we still hung with just like we'd
make ourselves macaroni and cheese, you know, you know, the
easy stuff. But she's she's making you know, fish yourself,
(03:33):
salmon and stuff. You said that she was making steaks. Yeah, yeah,
I've taught her how to you know, cook steak properly.
It's stune at the bootleather that I didn't understand. I
actually got miss Bond's eye. When we first met. She
used to eat her steak medium to medium. Well I
(03:56):
got her to the point now where she eats it
medium rare, you know, and and she understands now she goes, yeah,
it's got, you know, because it's.
Speaker 2 (04:09):
Just the tenderness and everything's just there.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
Especially when it's a good Ribby or like Chuck I.
I see someone cook a Rabbi well done and it hurts.
It's like why, I mean, I can understand, you.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
Know, no, no, and I'm spoiled.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
I'm spoiled. I was raised on t bone and I
used to think t bone was so awesome. No compared
to like Ribbi or Chuck I, it's tough, and even
when cooked right, just doesn't have the same at all,
you know, although the thing we always loved about like
(04:48):
t bone is you know, sucking that thing clean, ripping
all the the tendon off me like he likes the bone.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
The preferred for me is is medium rare, but there is.
I just cannot understand the freaking like rare mooing you
like to eat because I just can't chew through it
well enough at all.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
I'll choke on it.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
Stuff You're that much meat in your mouth.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
I mean, it's I mean he seen. I mean sometimes
I mean I will like literally do it so that's it,
and it is literally raw. I love it. It's delicious.
Speaker 3 (05:38):
Sometimes I wonder how you still don't have like salmonella
three times over, Like it looks like you literally just
took it out of the freezer and started eating.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
I would get it from the store and I'll tenorize
it for the kids and the wife and cut off
a piece throw out my mouth. Why it's still there
looking at me like, what's wrong with Are you gonna sick?
Speaker 1 (05:59):
I'm like, I'm not ground beef. Yeah, you know, like
when I used to make meat loaf and other things
all the time. Now that my mom in law's here,
she won't let me cook. After I used to like cooking,
you know, but you know, she's just like, yeah, okay, whatever.
She still lets me cook steak, you know, for the house.
(06:19):
But if I got a big wad five pounds of
ground beef and I'm making you know, like hamburgers or
meatballs or meatloff or whatever, yeah, you'll see me break
off raw chunks and just gotta test it, you know,
like make sure it's good.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
Yeah, even though overall the food she makes is better,
after having chicken for like two weeks in a row
every dinner, it gets boring and then I start missing
her ground beef because it actually its variety.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Yeah, I mean we do cook a lot of chicken here,
you know too, I mean protein when I did most
of the cooking when and normally she would come for
six months and then go back to your crank for
six months, you know, because she was helping with the
kids when the kids were small. Now you know, the
kids are older, but they moved here permanently. But prior
(07:13):
to them coming here, I had a system. Monday Night
was this Tuesday, and it rotated. It's on the calendar
right every week. Batman bam man man, you know, so
like the kids would know, and they loved pizza night.
And no, I didn't cheat and go order pizza. I
would get the giorno uh usually the three cheese one,
(07:38):
and then I would add my own topics, fresh vegetable meats, whatever,
and then I put another layer of cheese on top
of it. That sounds pretty good. The tater tot pizza
that I would make, the kids loved it so so
so unhealthy. I mean, it's like if you're if you're
(08:01):
gonna do a cheat day, let me make you my
tater tote day. It rocked. But yeah, you have two
slices and you're like completely full. You feel like.
Speaker 3 (08:17):
My favorite to the longest time was the ground beef
with melted cheese and mushrooms you would make.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
It'd make like freaking every Monday, Yeah, like two freaking
full pots. Then I loved it. Yeah, and it was
it was just ground beef with the onions and the
mushrooms and cheese and the skillet. Huge amount. We'd be
eating on that for two days, you know, make sandwiches
out of it. Yeah, yeah, you know. And the kids
(08:44):
loved it, you know. I mean, but who am I
to argue with a Ukrainian mom in law that wants
to she wants to cook, Let her cook. Yeah, you
got other things to do. So this is gonna be
the last show before Thanksgiving because you know, schedules get
really really tough going in. So I wanted to get
(09:05):
this show in beforehand. And every Thanksgiving show I do.
I read the Thanksgiving Proclamation from October third, seventeen eighty
nine by our first President, George Washington. So here I go,
(09:29):
by the President of the United States, a proclamation This
was New York, October third, seventeen eighty nine. Whereas it
is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the providence
of Almighty God, to obey his will, to be grateful
for his benefits, and humbly to implore his protection and favor.
And whereas both Houses of Congress have by their joint
(09:50):
Committee requested me to recommend to the people of the
United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer to
be observed by acknowledge with grateful hearts, the many signal
favors of Almighty God, especially by affording them as an
opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their
(10:11):
safety and happiness. Now, therefore, I do recommend and to
sign Thursday, the twenty sixth day of November next to
be devoted by the people of these States to the
service of that great and glorious Being who is the
beneficient author of all the good that was, that is,
(10:32):
or that will be. That we may then all unite
in rendering unto Him our sincere and humble thanks for
his kind care and protection of the people of this
country previous to their becoming a nation, For the signal
and manifold mercies and the favorable interpretations of His providence
which we experience in the course and conclusion of the
(10:55):
late War, For the great degree of tranquility, union, and plenty,
which we have since enjoyed, for the peaceable and rational
manner in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions
of government for our safety and happiness, and particularly the
national one now lately instituted, for the civil and religious
(11:17):
liberty with which we are blessed, and the means we
have of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge, and in general,
for all the great and various favors which He hath
been pleased to confer upon us, And also that we
may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and
(11:37):
supplications to the Great Lord and Ruler of nations, and
beseech him to pardon our national and other transgressions, to
enable us, all, whether in public or private stations, to
perform our several and relative duties properly and punctually, to
render our national government a blessing to all the people,
by constantly being a government of wise us and constitutional laws,
(12:02):
discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed, to protect and guide
all sovereigns and nations, especially such as have shown kindness
unto us, and to bless them with good government, peace
and concord to promote the knowledge and practice of true
religion and virtue, and the increase of science among them
(12:25):
and us, and generally to grant unto all mankinds such
a degree of temporal prosperity as he alone knows to
be best, give it under my hand in the City
of New York on a third day of October, in
the year of Our Lord, seventeen eighty nine, George Washington. So, yeah,
all that time. And that's one of the things that
(12:47):
really gets me when we have people now especially that
sit there and have the well say, we're not a
Christian nation. Really almost everything that our founding fathers talked about,
it doesn't mean that we are all a Christian nation
(13:10):
of one denomination, but we are a Judeo Christian nation
that believes in the God and the laws of the
Judeo Christian faiths, you know, be it Catholic, Jewish, you know,
all the different Protestant religions, you know, so on and
(13:31):
so forth. And it's like, I don't understand how these
people can sit there and go, we're not a Christian nation,
you know. You know, it's a second we're secular. When
were we secular? Yeah? You know, I mean we have
freedom of religion, not freedom from religion. You know, you
(13:51):
can worship whoever you want, but this is what our
country is about. Yeah, really pretty simple, you know. Now, Twisch,
you go to a Christian score, and I know there's
because of where it is. You know, there are some
conservatives there, of course, you know, because they tend to
(14:13):
be more in private Christian or faith based school. Yes,
but you also have quite a few of lefties that
go there because the parents don't want the kids going
to public school because it's either not safe or they
want a better education. But you know, and they either
don't believe in the whole God thing at all, they're
(14:33):
just sending them there to the school whatever you know
kind of thing, or they do. But they're those weird
lefty Christians that even though they profess to be Christians,
they're pro abortion, pro homosexuality, pro trans, pro this that
and the other.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
And Palestine.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
Yeah, it's like, you know, but that's something that I
have to argue with my well, not not not argue,
discuss with my daughter. Quite often. She's taking a pretty
hard line on the trans issue. You know. She sometimes
will even say things like I hate them, and I'm
like no no, no, no, no, no, no no no.
(15:16):
You know, Christians or people of faith in general, you know,
we are taught hate the sin, love the sinner, you know.
So it's like, yeah, they're doing wrong, but that doesn't
mean to you hate them. You know, if they're cold,
give them your coat, if they're hungry, give them food.
(15:39):
You know, don't try to force the right, you know,
don't try to force our way on them if they ask,
if we accept what they're doing. No, we believe it's wrong.
But that's you. Yeah, that's your life. You're gonna have
to deal with the big guy up stairs when time comes. Now.
(16:01):
If you have questions and you want to know why
we believe the way we believe, feel free to ask.
And I'm not trying to judge you. Come sit down,
we'll talk.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
You're not gonna like it exactly.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
You know. And you know, and I think it's because
some of my daughter's friends or now ex friends, really
went to the left side on them. And she doesn't
want to admit it, but I think it really kind
of hurt her that they, like, you know, the old
(16:35):
saying I didn't leave the such and such party, the
party left me. I think that's how she feels. You know,
she didn't really walk out of them, but they all
went that way, and she's like no, yeah in her
beliefs like no, it's wrong, and she she's kind of
lashed out, like they took my friends kind of you know,
(16:56):
I don't feel the same way. Yeah. Yeah, so, but
I mean she's she is getting better about it, though, yeah,
you know, still a little aggressive.
Speaker 3 (17:03):
Like she'll she'll look at any any piece of media,
even if we're just like watching a show or something
like that. There'll be like a single gay character, even
two characters who like interact once in a certain way
and it's never even like confirmed that they're gay or
something like that, and she'll just be like, they're gay.
I hate this show. I've never I'm never watching it again. Like, yeah,
(17:25):
I can understand.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
Or is it the sense of humor that she has
because of you? Because I mean I'll be watching the
shows too, And I was like, really, this show sucks.
I mean it's like, now this sucks because it's about that.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
You know.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
It's like like you've seen the movie Boots, right, You've
seen the show Boots. No, not yet, it's about marines
going into Boot camp, and it's actually about a gay
about gay people being people being gay in the Marines
and it's not okay, so it's really about that, but
(18:01):
it has a real strong storyline about boot camp with
the Marines and stuff like that. It's a good movie,
and it's this weird like you, it's.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
Like certain shows, I don't mind there being a gay
character because you don't there are gay people in the world,
so if.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
And sometimes they're the closest people that you can meet.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
Oh hell yeah, I have a friend that's trendy, you know,
and and he she whatever. I mean, I've known, Okay,
I'm gonna try to be nice her since high school,
you know, when her was he But you know, it's
I don't mind them being in some TV shows and
(18:45):
movies because it is part of reality. But sometimes when
they push the narrative to the point to where it's like,
you know, some shows, it's like every other character is
and he's sleeping with him and she's sleeping with her,
and and when it only becomes about.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
That, it's like, yeah, and that's what it's good about
this movie because it's not all it's not all about that, right,
It's it's more about the Marines and how they went
through the movie camp and.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
The reality is there are gay people in the military.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
There is you know, which you can't stop anything, and
that's what they choose.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
I don't care who you put your wang into, you know, as.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Long as stay away from mine.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
Well besides that, but if I go down on the field,
and I mean go down as and get hit, not
go down. Uh. If I get hit on the field,
they're going to be there to save you. I want
you to be able to you know, I want to
know that you can drag me out or take care
of me like anybody else. They're still your brother exactly,
you know, or sister sister.
Speaker 3 (19:46):
I mean, the whole it is that she's like, she's
she'll see a freaking gay person in the show. It
could be the best show ever had, like the strongest,
like most perfect narrative. And then she'll say am athlete sucks,
or she'll go as far to where she's not saying it,
but I can tell she's implying she thinks that that
isn't a person, you know, it's a human being.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Yeah, you know again, she's she's young, she's coming to
terms with all these we're still lost her lotsome friends.
I mean because like the one friend that she had,
they were really close. They've been close since like damn
your kindergarten, you know, and now all of a sudden boom,
they don't talk at all. So it's gonna where that's
that's where, that's that's life. Yeah, it sucks, but that's
(20:32):
so being it's thanksgiving. Like what are you guys thankful for.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
I'm thankful for my family, think for you guys, this
tribe that.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
We have, knowing what we know rather than being in
the dark. So when stuff happens, we're gonna be We're
not going to be like the bulk of the masses,
what happened, what's going on?
Speaker 2 (20:57):
We're gonna be taking care of business.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
Why are the lights out? Why is there no water?
Why can't I flush mike toilet?
Speaker 2 (21:02):
Our family is gonna be taken care of. Yeah, that's
the biggest thing. I'm beautiful.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
I'm thankful for having Honestly, you know, I mean not
saying this because you're here a twitch, but you know,
having two awesome kids, you know that aren't perfect. No
one's perfect, No one's perfect, you know, you know, I know, folks,
that's hard to believe. Ponza is not perfect, but it's true.
(21:29):
But the fact that you know, they are growing and
learning and becoming a part of everything that we're doing
in the tribe, you know. Uh, like Twitch is doing
so good with everything. We have some videos of our
last big training which I wish I could share, but
I but we can't. But because I'm so proud of him.
(21:53):
You know the kids, right, you know, and now, I
mean now privately, if you're a close friend, you know
you want to see something, but I'm not gonna ever
post these, you know online.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
It was just a good yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
And we have an up training up and up and
up training and upcoming training this uh this weekend. It's
just a just range, like just practicing stuff, zeroing in
t which is gonna be out there because he hasn't
had a chance to shoot his six five for a bit.
(22:29):
I've never shot his six five yet, so I want
it is beautiful, I know. So, I mean I'm gonna
be plinking and uh, Skittles is gonna bake in appearance. Yeah,
you know, Skittles, that's the uh, that's the female daughter
as opposed to a male daughter. You should hear the
wife she is. She's always you know, saying it's like
(22:54):
you're my second favorite daughter. It's okay, it's it's okay,
just accepted.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
I'm at this point I am taking more from her
and she's taking and Kitchen is taking more from you, which.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
Is that's usually how it goes. Yeah, it's like, you know,
usually it's mama's boy and daddy's girl, you know.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
And I have all three girls, so it it's weird.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
So as far as you're old as his boyfriend, what
happened there? She's still datium? Yeah, well no, but I mean,
you know, if she took after you, how like what
she did?
Speaker 2 (23:29):
So I found We just went to his birthday party
over the weekend on Friday actually, and uh we spent
some time with the family, his family and very cool people.
I did find out they're they're against you know, what
we believe in, right, they're far left, and uh it's
(23:50):
kind of interesting to like tell them where we're stands,
like where we stand and where they stand. And I
almost got them to change her mind's which is awesome.
They're like, wow, we ever looked at it that way.
We've always looked at the media, the TV, what's on TV.
I'm like, okay, stop watching that stuff. I was like,
tune into Bonds ice prepping, like we go through all
(24:11):
kinds of news and stuff. And she's like, oh, that's
a little raphal like crazy. But I was like, now,
I'm just telling you that that's yeah, a good place
it's to start.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
I mean maybe they're not quite ready for our uber though. Yeah.
And she h she's a very sweet lady. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (24:32):
And she came in and she always hugs me, and
she's like, I'm always caring. She's like, is that a gun?
I was like yes, She's like oh okay. And I
was in her house, so I was like, do you
want me to take it outside? I want to respect
your house.
Speaker 1 (24:49):
She's like no, we.
Speaker 2 (24:50):
Feel safe that you're here.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
Okay. Cool.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
And she's like thank you for you know, the respect
that you're you're gonna do that for us. And I
was like, it's no big deal.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
At work now because I sometimes wear my uh my
uh uh concealable uh like body arm. Yeah, you know,
and a couple of people know that I do, like
whenever I show up like wearing my like big hoodie,
because that's what you do it, they like poke me
s if I'm wearing it, you know, it's like you
got it on, what you're playing on? Hiding behind me?
Speaker 2 (25:25):
What are you gonna do? Please don't shoot me, you know.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
But they came to with the drone the other day too,
because of the work they're going to be doing. Yeah,
we get a little like aerial and uh uh massive
sergeant mic like next door. As soon as the drone
like went up in the air, my phone rings. Is
that yours? Or do I get to shoot it out
(25:50):
of the sky? And I'm like, please don't, It's not mine,
but it is. Yeah, they're servant and he's like, oh okay, okay,
damn you you come here in the manner and you start,
you know, doing some dumb stuff.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
You're gonna there's some really expensive stuff.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
Okay, let's get started. We got a new hot tub
we've been talking about. It got delivered. It's awesome. Things
like a thousand pounds. The thing is heavy. How did
we get it in there? Took apart like one of
the screen sections and they had it in on it
side yeah, and like set it down. It was a
(26:35):
three guys. They were cool, you know, having to lay
that thousand pound thing down on its side, they're just
like a you know, I was there for emotional support.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
It's not your job. You're paying them to do it.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
I'm paying them seven hundred and fifty bucks to like
deliver the exact thing. And you know, and it's like
you hurt your back. I'm not you got this, but
so now just gotta get Tony from in Phase Electric,
like one of the top electrical places here in central Florida.
He's a good friend of mine. I've known him damn
(27:13):
since two thousand and nine ten, and he's a vent himself.
He was in the Navy and he uh, he does
a lot of work out here for us, you know,
cooking a lot of stuff up, a lot of wiring.
And he's taught me a lot too. I Mean, anytime
him and En or his crew is here, I always
(27:33):
jump in and help. I'll help dig the trenches. I'll
have them sit there and show me, yeah, you know,
do this, do this, don't touch that, you go boom,
the kind of thing. And uh, because I've always seen
it as anytime you're having work done on your house
or even your vehicle, don't be a dick about it,
(27:54):
but hang out with the tech because it's good to
know what's going on. Not that you're like making sure
they're doing things right, but it's more like so you
can learn so that if something goes wrong, you know,
like whatever it is, you can speak intelligently the next
time that you call them. Hey, yeah, like remember when
(28:14):
you did X, Y and Z, Well this is happening.
Maybe it's because of this, or because because because now
you're learning, you know how things go, how things work right,
so you're not that customer I don't know it's making
this clanking sound and that's all you know, you know,
you can actually give them more information so they can
better diagnose what's going on. Yes, you know, and so
(28:36):
it's you know, and or I mean there's been times
like with my uh like well guy Gary, you know
there's been times when something's gone wrong with well, I've
called him up and he is it doing this and this? Yeah,
he goes, Okay, he trusts me now because I've worked
with him enough. He goes, okay, go out there, turn
(28:57):
off to power, do this, this and this, and then
turn the power back on it. Tell me if it works,
it works awesome, thank you see. And that saved me
for him to come out him driving all the way
out here, having to pay him you know if he
even though he cuts me deals, but still you know,
he deserves to get paid for it. Yes, he came
out here and so he figured. You know, it's and
(29:17):
you when you build that kind of relationship with texts,
you know, a they respect you more. It makes their
life easier. Oh yeah, I've pulled plenty of cable through
the conduit before, you know, And to me it's fun
too anyways, you know, and trying to like plan things out,
(29:39):
it's like, well you think maybe like we could run
it here and you know, or like yes, or knowing why,
and then so the next time it's like, yeah, I
know we can't do this, but can't we do this? Yeah? Yeah? Okay,
so you know.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
Yeah, I mean I prefer talking to customers, especially women,
because they can make the noises that it's making and
it's like spot on, Okay, I know what's going.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
On speaking this noise. Okay, Okay, I got you. Okay.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
You know, you get to meet some you know, pretty
cool people. Yeah, beautiful people too.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
So twitch tell me what are you thankful for?
Speaker 3 (30:18):
As as much as I hate to admit it, I
have to say, the freaking school because despite all the
bull crap we have to put up with pretty much
every single day, it is a lot better than a
lot of public schools, and the education is a lot better,
even if while we're not in class we give it
(30:38):
a lot of crap. But I have to say that
because a lot of people don't have that, even though
I don't want to.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
Yeah, there's a I mean, we are blessed that we
have been able to send you guys there, you know,
and again a little fore planning. This is for all
the young people that tuning in. And I don't necessarily
mean like in the teens. I'm talking like young adults
in your like early twenties. Yeah, you're just getting married
(31:08):
or you've got a significant other for your kids, and
you're you're struggling to get by and you have kids
all of a sudden boom. Now, I mean kids are
a blessing. Yeah, in every way, shape and form. Boy,
it's hard. It's hard, especially when you're just starting out
(31:32):
and you don't have a lot. That's why, like when
me and my wife got married, I was thirty two
going on thirty three, she was twenty five. We waited
a full seven years before we had kids, to make
sure we fixed everything financially, we got out of debt,
We took care of things so that we could give
them more. Yeah, because if we could have had kids
(31:55):
boom right after we got married, but we would have
struggled way worse than than we did, and we wouldn't
be able to have you know, done what you're doing. Yeah,
you know, I mean you're doing a great job. It's
so I mean, it's you know, people have to understand.
Sometimes delayed gratification is much better, you know, just have
(32:17):
life happens. Yeah, exactly, Accidents happen, I understand. Let's put
this way. An accident can happen. Yes, Now, if you're
on number four and it's like I don't understand why,
you know there there's an issue there.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
Something, but yeah, you should be able to figure that
one out.
Speaker 1 (32:35):
But sometimes the pill doesn't work. Sometimes vasectomes don't work perfectly.
You know, it's a thousand to one with you know,
the like voseectomies. But it does happen. So I'm not slamming.
If you know you are taking all the precautions and
it still happens, I'm okay. You know, meant to be
what exactly what if you're on accident number three? I'm sorry,
(33:00):
it's not an accident. Close those knees. Yeah, you know,
there's there's other things you can do to please your partner, right,
you know.
Speaker 3 (33:09):
It's like that one freaking baby that was born recently.
That was that when it was born, it came out
holding its freaking iud.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
Yes, yeah, I've see now.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
I was like, whoa you thought you had me?
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Yeah? That alpha male right? Oh yeah toombslayer?
Speaker 2 (33:29):
Was he like what three years old now something like that?
Speaker 1 (33:32):
Still holding it?
Speaker 2 (33:33):
Probably they probably put in a yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
I want you to remember mommy. We got more chickens. Yeah. Cool,
So we're up to like I lost count in there
because you know, chickens don't tend to line up for you.
But it's over thirty six hens in there now, and
we've got twelve roosters that we need to process and
(33:58):
throw in the freezer. So I mean that's a good thing.
We get tons of eggs. So how are the last
batch eggs that I gave? It was good.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
Yeah, we had like one or two, but that was
that's normal.
Speaker 1 (34:11):
Yeah, yeah occasionally yeahah, because then I.
Speaker 2 (34:14):
Had to teach the kids to put it, get a bowl,
cracking the bowl.
Speaker 1 (34:19):
Is it good?
Speaker 2 (34:20):
Yes, throw it in the rest of them. And you know,
I was like, you should be doing that with the
store bot eggs too, because you never know.
Speaker 1 (34:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
I guess they check them, but you don't know.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
Because they sit, They sit for a while, very long time. Yeah.
Sometimes they're frozen before they get to the stores. Yeah.
And frozen eggs are not good. No, unless it scrambled it,
because you can scramp. You can scramble like pre scramble
the egg and then freeze it, yes, you know, and
then you can use it for scrambled eggs. But you
don't freeze whole eggs in the shop. No, that just
(34:51):
doesn't work. It got cold, it did. The temperature dropped
it finally, finally it got down here at the compound.
He got down to thirty seven one morning with the windshill.
It was about thirty It was pretty cold. It was nice.
Speaker 2 (35:06):
Yeah, well I don't like the cold weather.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
You ain't got much meat on your bones.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
Well, I just working up in Colorado all those years
and always in the snow and standing in the snow
and the cold. That's why I moved down here. And
then it's here.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
So yeah, but I mean it was nice and the
daytime was I mean too, it was beautiful. Yeah, no,
I can deal with that. Yes, oh great to work
with the animals outside. Oh yeah, you don't get hot
at all.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Right, anything under fifty I'm I'm like, okay, I'm I'm good,
like I'm not going outside. I don't want to go outside.
After fifty I'll go outside.
Speaker 1 (35:45):
And I heard the only drawback. I don't like to
be cold.
Speaker 3 (35:49):
The only drawback to all this cold is that every
other day now I hear Mariah Carey slowly seeping into
the media's freaking Oh Christmas.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Oh yeah, all the Christmas songs are are are starting
to come out, starting to seep in. I put my
lights up today. You did on the outside of the
house with the kids, with the kids, See, we usually
don't do it.
Speaker 2 (36:16):
Yeah, but I was like, I gotta do something for
the baby because you know, lights, and.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
We do it simple. When we moved into the new house,
we put up a Christmas street because Christmas and it
has not.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
Come down, but for every holiday it changes.
Speaker 1 (36:29):
Yeah, which is awesome. You know, fourth of July we
did it, you know, you know Saint Patti's Day, we'll
do you know, shamrocks and empty can guinness, you know,
things like that. Yeah, Christmas Easter Uh in the past. Uh,
we didn't do anything this year, but in the past
(36:52):
we've done crosses and you know, plastic eggs, you know,
easter stuff, pastel color. You know, it's pretty cool. It's
become a holiday tree rather right. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
You know, my wife wants to do it, and I
was like, why not. Yeah, you know, we might as
well just leave it up this year and just keep
on going with it.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
But we don't do any outside like decorations anymore like
we used to, like back in the day.
Speaker 2 (37:17):
Just I don't know, it's just it's a lot of work. Yeah,
that's why I found out today. I was like, man,
this sucks.
Speaker 1 (37:24):
And because as you get older, time goes faster. Yeah,
you know, because the perception of time goes faster. When
you were a kid, it seemed like the Christmas season
lasted forever. For us adults. It's like, even if we
put the stuff up, let's say, the day after Thanksgiving,
we take it right back down. It's like like to us,
(37:47):
it feels like the next day we're taking it down right,
So it's like why we put them up in the
first place. Yeah, you know, even though it's been six
weeks or whatever, you know, but it's just it go
by so quick.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
Now it's just like you gotta remember you're doing it
the kids, and the kids this time, like you said,
goes slower, but are they get to enjoy it?
Speaker 1 (38:05):
But my kids are older yeah right, yeah, going to
be sixteen and twelve. So when they were little, we
did it before, you know, I mean my uh, my stepfather,
my wife, my wife, my mom's third husband. Yeah, third husband.
He surprised them a couple of years, coming dressed up
(38:26):
like Santa Clas showing up, you know, with the big rids. Yeah,
handing out the things like that, you know, which was cute. Yeah,
you know when he was four.
Speaker 3 (38:37):
Yeah, I don't remember it much, but I it's blurry,
but I got it.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Yeah. Well that's like me with most Saturday nights out
of their store. And so yeah, it got nice and cold.
It's warmed up again to our normal temperatures for like
this time of the year, you know, mid seventies during
the day, mid fifties at night, which is nice, which
is nice, but during that cold snap. We had the
(39:05):
we of course had the iguana apocalypse in South Florida.
Like whenever I thought you were handing them a beer
there for a second, people that aren't from here don't
don't understand when the temperature gets below what is it,
thirty five? It's either forty or thirty five that iguanas
(39:30):
don't die, but they kind of go into a state
of hibernation, hibernation in a way, and they will just
like literally drop out of the trees. They just kind
of slow down and then they fall out of the trees.
They're also called the you know, chicken of the tree there.
Iguana is very very tasty. So what the seminoles used
(39:57):
to do here, you know, was like when did get
cold and they drop it, they would harvest all the iguanas.
You know. That's aren't the nuisance down south? Oh yeah
they are. Yeah, so you're you're allowed to kill them, right? Yeah? Yeah,
you know so yeah, yeah, when it gets cold, if
you guys, you know, I want to grab some extra
you know, extra meat for thanks. They're big, some of
(40:20):
they're huge, three four feet long. I mean that's what
the tail the bodies of solid Jubil's thick. Yeah, there's
size of my forearm sometimes a little bit bigger, you know,
like Rhino's forearm, right, which is it's huge. I'm starting
to vein out like at that, you know, little veins.
But still these are.
Speaker 2 (40:40):
Like freaking uh damn man.
Speaker 1 (40:46):
But yeah, so that's the iguana apocalypse, you know. I
mean we joke around about it and everything, but it's
true that they just start dropping. And it's so funny
seeing people move here from other places and the first
cold snap, that's that cold. Yeah they see I didn't
know that was up there. Yeah, they're up there. They're
(41:08):
dropping right down on top of you. Sad.
Speaker 3 (41:10):
It would be like one of the iguanas is still
like semi awake as it falls, somebody picks it up
and starts cutting it up while it's still alive.
Speaker 1 (41:18):
Well, you know, shit, shit happens. Man. You're hungry, you're
gonna eat it. Okay. We had a listener question come in.
It was from an anonymous member. Uh. The person wanted
to remain anominous. Uh, enomenous, anomenous, but I know who
(41:40):
it is, but you know, I'm just respecting what they wanted.
This person asks, if you were going to buy a
pickup truck as a prepper. What is the smartest choices
and why I'm considering my next vehicle being a truck.
I wanted to be large and tall enough to handle
fields and flooding within reason. Not really interested in jacking
up the truck all hi, but just one that's not
(42:02):
puny either. I've never had a truck before. I know
they can be more powerful and dangerous to drive, more
difficult to stop, etc. What's a good option for someone
new to this. What might be some recommendations of a
big truck that isn't so wide and quite as difficult
to fit down a narrow road. I know I've seen
some that are more narrow, but haven't paid attention to
(42:25):
what models that might have been. I definitely am considering
manufacturer reliability, parts availability and all. I know many people
hate Ford, and many people will die on the hill
of defending Ford. Let's be rational, please, Toyota, Toyota and
Honda are reliable car brands with the easiest replacent parts
to obtain. What's the best top one or two trucks,
(42:48):
Chevy Dodge, you know? Or are they all kind of
the same. I do not like excessive technology smart person.
My current view hicle is a twenty seventeen rav for
and I love it. I can connect my music with Bluetooth,
I can use cruise control, and that's the extent of
automated functions that I want. I don't like sensors and
(43:12):
auto on everything. I don't want my lights turning themselves off,
my seatbelts demanding to be clicked, et cetera, et cetera.
My rav does those things too, but I'm trying to
describe what I would prefer in the next vehicle. No
modern robot function, garbage, no buttons, start distance, start, fingerprint lock.
You know no more that the things that can break
(43:32):
or get hacked. If I have to take a step
back and relinquish my desire for Bluetooth, I probably will
move the older direction before being pushed newer. If you
have an idea of what trucks would be good for me,
please let me know so I can begin comparing models.
A very well thought out question, and there were several
(43:52):
answers because that was posted in Saint Cloud Prepping and Surviving. Yeah,
and I told the some that show one five, we're
going to answer the question. But there were people chimed
in anyways, of course, And the first ones that came up,
of course, were older Toyotas.
Speaker 2 (44:11):
They're super That is gonna be the number one.
Speaker 1 (44:13):
Actually, you know, terrorist organizations around the world can't all
be wrong, you know, I mean that, and you know
i'de in the US. Yeah that or I chimed in,
you know, if I was ever going to buy a
foreign vehicle, Yes, it would be an older like Toyota, definitely,
because they they're rock solid.
Speaker 2 (44:35):
Even with the like our x flour our far Runner
is a twenty two. They don't have all the bills
and whistles, right, like, it's just a base model four
by four.
Speaker 1 (44:46):
Right and very capable. Still, yeah, dude, it is amazing.
Speaker 2 (44:51):
But while the technology is not there, it's all like
way backdated, which is what I wanted.
Speaker 1 (44:58):
I suggested to her, though. I mean, honestly, any seventies
to early nineties square body Chevy Ford, you know, and again,
you know, for all the Ford haters out there, I've
always joked.
Speaker 2 (45:13):
Around, you know, to where because those Fords were the
ones to get.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
I'm a Chevy guy myself, but I cannot diss the
older Fords. They're awesome drunks too.
Speaker 2 (45:23):
I'm a Chevy guy too. Yeah, even though I work
on Ford all day, I don't want to Ford.
Speaker 1 (45:27):
You know. So I mean parts are easy to get
for the old toyotas, the old Chevyes, the old Fords,
some of the old Dodges.
Speaker 2 (45:39):
I mean, I would stay away from Dodge.
Speaker 1 (45:43):
If you're gonna get an older Dodge. When I'm saying older,
I mean like you know, like a Willie's Well no,
I mean like early seventies, you know, late sixties, early seventies.
The three eighteen is hard to kill, yes, that motor. Yeah,
I mean that the three eighteen will run.
Speaker 2 (46:03):
For although the newer three eighteen you will find dead.
Speaker 1 (46:06):
Well, yeah, a newer Yeah. I had a guy he
was swapping out, uh in an old charger, yeah game
with the three eighteen. He got a four forty four
that he was building up, you know, and since he
was just gonna trash the three eighteen anyways, he wanted
to do a test how far will it go? Drained
(46:28):
all the oil out of it, put the plug back in,
and he drove it around and literally he drove it
around for two days before it finally seized up. That's crazy, yeah,
you know. And that was with all the oil. The
only oil that was in it was what was in
the oil filter. But he he like.
Speaker 2 (46:48):
Bearing, bearing, clearances and everything are just perfect.
Speaker 1 (46:52):
Yeah, So it's like so yeah. I mean, honestly, any
of the older Square Body, Forge and Shiites, Toyota, even
some of the more like modern Toyotas. I definitely if
you're gonna stick with Ford or Chevy, get the older ones.
I don't like any of the newer ones at all.
Anything after I Okay, I've got a two thousand and
(47:17):
four suburban that's four WORL drive, it's got the sixth leader,
it's got over three hundred and twenty thousand miles on it.
It's still running. Is it perfect? No, anything that old
you do start to have to do. There's things to
wear out regardless. But I can plan, you know it
is it is still holding strong. My hummer, it's an
Age two. Uh, it's a two thousand and seven. It's
(47:39):
got three hundred and thirty thousand miles. You and I
do all the work on it and it's still it's
it's still perfect. It's still tooling along. Oh yeah. It
all comes down to maintenance, really, Yeah, it comes down
to maintenance, but really anything past like twenty ten. I'm sorry, yeah,
you know, it's then they really started going crazy with
(48:00):
the computers, crazy with the electronics, crazy with all the
robotic functions and crazy stuff. And no, no.
Speaker 2 (48:09):
Today we went to Harbor Freight and we're walking out
and I seen this Toyota sitting there Tacoma, brand new,
and I'm like, wow, I it is a perfect color.
It had everything. I was like amazed and I rocked
walked to the side of it. It has a snarkle
on it, run factory and it's a trail trail boss.
(48:31):
I haven't seen one before.
Speaker 1 (48:33):
But it was.
Speaker 2 (48:35):
Everything on it that would make you or it would
be so easy to go down through water whatever you
needed to do.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
It was there.
Speaker 2 (48:43):
Even had the cranks. It didn't have power windows because
you know, going through the water, it was made to
like to submerge.
Speaker 1 (48:52):
Yeah yeah, oh yeah, dude. It was brand new. It's
see now Twitch is going to get the H two
is his first vehicle. He's doing the thumbs up. That's
also why we're like fixing it up nice for him
and everything. We're working on H one. Yeah. Well again,
if it wasn't for the addition that we're doing on
(49:12):
the house. A Nick Nick from A Nick's Edibles. He's, uh,
the guy that I get most of my trees from
my fruit trees and stuff. I gotta check him out
on Facebook. Nicks Edibles right here in Central Florida. Uh,
he found for me because he knows I'm into this stuff.
(49:33):
It was late eighties h one like military, not the
civilian one. It looked like it was fully restored. It
was slant back. You know. It was either twenty four
thousand or twenty seven thousand. That's a steal. You know.
If it wasn't for the fact that we're doing the addition,
(49:54):
I would have been like, honey, it's got you a jeep,
let me have this. Yep, you know. I mean, but
it beauty doing the responsible thing. I just cried. I
think it's still there. Yeah, but if it's still there
this time next year, maybe, But I hain't down that series.
(50:17):
It might be, I mean, things pop up occasion. Yeah anyways,
but yeah, it's I want to get the h one,
a nice old like military one. Yeah. It might have
to be for the safety of me and anyone driving
with me.
Speaker 2 (50:30):
Yeah, my old lady it too, and She's like, that's
really nice.
Speaker 1 (50:36):
But yeah, you know, I may let you since we're
going to be down at Ox's property. Yeah, that'd be great.
You have too much trust in me, you know. Let
you get behind the wheel of the like Hubbard, just
to get a feel because you need to start, you know,
like learning, And that's how I did. My aunt Bernadette,
she taught me how to drive. I was fifteen or sixteen,
(51:00):
and it was in a Fouriel Drive three ninety six
Chevy square body with a three speed stick on the column. Yeah.
That was weird learning how to with a stick shift
on the column. And yes, it's weird. That's how I
(51:21):
learned how to drive. And that was down like dirt
roads like Malabar. You know we should be able to
spinding tires a little bit. Oh yeah, no, it was.
It was fun. I stalled it a lot, you know,
because you have to learn to clutch and everything. That's
the one thing that you kinda have to get something
that that has a stick shift so you can learn that.
(51:43):
What the super super Bow, Yeah you can drive the
super but he's not a lesbian. I'm not lesbian either.
That thing is it's fun. So Anonymous member. Those are
our suggestions. And again the older the better, because the
the less electronics on it, the better.
Speaker 2 (52:08):
I mean also for amposes.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
Right exactly for E M P. And you know, things
like that cheaper ease of being able to fix it
yourself or have, you know, even if you aren't comfortable
and like working on a vehicle yourself. It's just if
you have a friend that does. It's just it's so
much you don't need a computer to diagnose. That's where
(52:33):
it comes in. It's old school. You listen, you feel,
you smell, you know, taste, you know it's running rich,
I can smell, you know, I can feel there's a miss,
there's a miss on this side. Yeah, it just it
was really more of an art form and it is.
That's how I grew up all this computer crap now
(52:54):
I it sucks. I don't bother. But yeah, so if
you have any other questions, feel free to post. You know,
this goes to anyone that's tuning in to say, cloud
prepping and surviving. You could post it there and other
people will chime in with answers, or you could always
email us bonds at mfordio dot com if you don't
(53:14):
want to uh, you know, give the question out to
the general group if you just want us to give
our professional opinions as much as they can be professional,
even if you.
Speaker 2 (53:28):
Have promis at the vehicle and you don't want to
take it into the shop. Yeah, tune in, and we
got a couple of mechanics that will be more happy
to help you out.
Speaker 1 (53:36):
Yeah, I mean, you know, and mechanics are expensive. They
are they are expensive, and we work cheap like usually
beer and pizza you buy the parts. Well, yeah, just
feed us, like, give us a little something to drink
and you know, yeah, we'll have a good time. Okay.
(53:57):
Then I've been finding some really good things, like last
week was the year breakdown of you know what to
prep at some Yeah, I found a survival food checklist
just came off of true true prepper dot com. Okay,
(54:21):
it's really I have posted it in Sane claud Prepping
and Surviving and there's a link to truth prepper dot
com there too, so you know I'm not stealing it.
I'm giving credit to what credit is do You guys
can go there and check it out. But everyone needs
to be prepared for the very real possibly of there
being no electricity plan accordingly. Have some silver gold kerosene,
pro peak eaters, water generators in a feld the last
(54:43):
a few weeks, and enough food for a few months.
There's much more than that you should have in case
in an emergency to buy. But this here is a
pure survival checklist. Have guns and ammo, but do not overreact.
Stand for your neighbors and family, rely on your community,
make sure that they can rely on you. This is imperative,
(55:04):
but do not panic. Okay, So it gives it breaks
it down to where you've got short term survival, long
term survival, bugout survival, and food storage tools. And it's
got your little like your basic requirements, you know, the
bare like minimum suggested additions, and then consider adding you
(55:28):
know things so in their short term for the minimum requirements, water,
canned food, energy bars or granola, peanut, butter, crackers and chips.
You know that's your short term hurricane. You know you
need to survive for two, three weeks whatever because the
stores are closed. That's good. Just protein carbs. It doesn't
(55:52):
go bad, you know, yeah, quickly at all suggested additions
dried roots, nuts, powdered milk, oatmeal or cereal jams, and jellies.
You know, you should consider adding baby formula and or
pet food, depending if you have pets or small children exactly.
(56:17):
Now for bug out survival, you know, that's you've got
to get out of your house. You've got to just go. Uh.
The minimum requirements water survival food bars, beef jerkey, that's
you know, fix your back. You need your water survival
food bars for vitamins, minerals and protein and the beef
jerkey for that extra you know, and meat in your mouth.
(56:40):
You know. Suggested additions though, for your bugout energy bars,
freeze dried like mobile packs like MR type stuff. Nuts,
tuna pouches are considered adding because tuna there is cheap.
It's cheap. You get those pouches. They keep a long time,
(57:03):
they're easy to open. Yeah, and it's I'm not sure
about the pouches, but in the normal can, like one
of those cant's thirty three grams of protein. Yeah, the
pouch is a little less tuna in there, so it's
probably gonna be about twenty grams of protein. But still
they're thin enough to you can stack five or six
(57:24):
in there easy in your in your pack. Okay, Now
for long term survival this is what you would have
in your prepper pantry. You know, again not just for
like a short term hurricane kind of thing. The like
minimum requirements, water, canned food, beans, lentils and rice, energy
bars and graniola, peanut butter, survival bread, powdered and milk,
(57:47):
cooking oils and lard, can preserves, dehydrated fruits and veggies, honey,
freeze dried meats, freeze dried meals, freeze dried food, freeze
dried vegetables, suggested it condiments. You know, it's amazing what
ketchup or mustard or hot sauce can can do to
a bland, especially a freeze dried or dehydrated something or
(58:11):
other much better like MRIs. A lot of them come
with a little packet of hot you know in there
those are collector items. Yeah, and then consider adding a
survival seed vault basically seeds so that you can possibly
(58:31):
grow some of your own stuff to make it last longer,
because once the food runs out, you can have five
years where the food stocked up, but once it runs
out then what so you've got to be able to
be sustainable. You know. Now, some of the food storage
tools that you would need Uh, the minimum requirements would
(58:52):
be food great buckets.
Speaker 2 (58:54):
So actually at Walmart today I seen that they're carrying
they got a little section in their food aisle right
of like the food buckets, the hydrated fruits and vegetables,
and the what was it the honey and sugar something.
Speaker 1 (59:12):
Yeah. I think the brand they sell mostly is Augustin Farms. Yes,
it's it's not a bad brand. It's it's not Patriot.
Speaker 2 (59:22):
No, it's like one hundred dollars for the bucket for
thirty days for one person.
Speaker 1 (59:25):
Yeah, I was.
Speaker 2 (59:26):
It's not bad.
Speaker 1 (59:27):
Yeah, it's it's not bad at all. And I've our
pantry's got a mix of brands. We have some of those.
We've got some Sanandy. I'm not even sure if they're
a business anymore. We got some another brand too.
Speaker 2 (59:43):
You know, the Patriot one is having a sell right now.
Speaker 1 (59:47):
I remember what it was.
Speaker 2 (59:48):
I think if you bought two buckets, you get two
free and like one hundred and fifty dollars of something.
Speaker 1 (59:55):
Like water filtration something like.
Speaker 2 (59:57):
Yeah, there was it was something yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
Because like the the ones that I was buying for
a while that I was getting from Sam's online, those
it came with It was the month bucket for for
one person, and in it it came fire starting stuff
and a and a water bottle with the fuel yeah fuel,
the water purification thing in there. Yeah, they got massa Yeah.
(01:00:24):
And uh. Back when I was getting those, they were
they they would average anywhere from ninety to one hundred
dollars a bucket, like occasionally, uh, you can get them
on special. I think the cheapest I ever got him
was like seventy dollars a bucket. Yeah, I think they're
like one right now. Yeah, I mean will prices have
(01:00:44):
gone up in the last few years, but still it's
not bad even at one hundred and fifty dollars. You know,
a month's worth of food that'll that'll last, you know,
mylar bags, heavy duty shelving, oxygen absorbers. Suggested additions to
(01:01:05):
your food storage tools canning equipment, freezer, nice big you know,
deep freeze, a dehydrator, a vacuum stealer. Those cover most
of but now if you've got the money, you know,
a home, you know, so consider adding home freeze dryer.
(01:01:26):
They're pricey, they're anywhere between two and three grand, but
they're amazing. HB. Like one of our guys. He's one
of our outer in the tribe. But he bit the
bullet and he bought one. And he's got over one
thousand pounds of rabbit meat. Now that that's all freeze dried. Wow.
(01:01:46):
And he's brought stuff over to me to try the
freeze dried rabbit meat, eggs, various other things. So yeah,
you know, he's our man on that side. You know,
when stuff happens that they're gonna come here and he's
bringing it so you can, well, we do the chickens
and the coats, we can freeze dry stuff and then
(01:02:09):
impulse heat sealer, which is it's kind of like a
vacuum sealer, but it I'm not even sure how to
explain that one. It's it's more industrial, you know than
a vacuum sealer. It that would be kind of like
if you're doing large quantities of stuff, you know, it's
(01:02:33):
but yeah, so, I mean that would be your your
survival food checklist, your basic requirements, your suggested additions, and
then if you got the extra money, the consider adding.
Uh check it out. Sant Cloud Prepping and Surviving is
where we've posted it in our thing, but you can
go to the original list at true prepper dot com
(01:02:54):
slash survival food list, so you know you could checked
out check that out there. I mean I always try
to give credit to uh you know when I find
good stuff, you know, so that people don't think I'm
just saying, oh, yeah, it was me I made up
that list. No, no, no, I mean I can make up
some good stuff. But uh, you know doctor Joe, uh,
(01:03:20):
doctor Bones, and uh Nurse Amy, as they always do,
they posted some great articles uh this this week they
have posted in Saint Cloud Prepping and Surviving. A collapsed
lung due to trauma or other causes can be life
threatening off grid if de medic doesn't have the right
knowledge and supplies. In this article, doctor Joe Alton tells
you how to recognize one and rapidly provide emergency care.
(01:03:46):
So that so you can check that out that at
Saint Cloud Prepping and Surviving and then you know, go
to his actual site for a whole bunch of videos
and articles.
Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
I still have just be careful doing it because you
can get sued. Well yeah, exactly, that's a real deadline.
Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
Well that when we talk about most of these things,
it's for after shit.
Speaker 2 (01:04:11):
HiT's the fan, right, Okay, you know, it don't matter
after that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Right exactly, If you come across a car accident and
someone's in a real bad way, the only thing that
you should do is stop the bleedya you know. Other
than that, don't move them, don't move them unless the
car's on fire or something like that, and don't render
any other assistance other than stop the bleed. No chest starts, yeah,
(01:04:38):
you know, if you're certified for uh CPR, you know,
and obviously there's no pulse, okay, you know, but just
for legal reason, yes, even narcan. Yeah that's a that's
a tough one too. Yeah, but you know, most of
(01:05:00):
the stuff, it's shits at the fan. There is no doctor,
there is no paramedics coming to your rescue. Do what
you gotta do. This is the kind of stuff that
you would need to need to learn. And lastly, in
the general notes, got two more here m two guys
(01:05:21):
making tribe our friends like Dominic and them. Episode twenty three,
the live aired back on the twelve. It's of course
it's up there, so you guys can check out the
recorded version of it. They had special guests Jordan and
Melissa from the Florida Homestead channel on Facebook. They will
be discussing their homestead journey and other topics. Definitely check
(01:05:42):
them out. Tell them Bonds, I sent you those guys
where we go. We still got to get back on
their show. We just haven't had a chip. We've all
been so busy because if we do it, it's gonna
be live. Yeah, so you guys can tune in. It's
usually Wednesdays and we'll be on video. So you've been
get to see our ugly mugs. You know, it's just
(01:06:07):
a matter of trying to get us all scheduled. You know.
Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
I think it can be a little bit easier with
the new building.
Speaker 1 (01:06:13):
Yeah. Yeah, then then because then we'll have internet, Internet
right in there and everything. And lastly, this is gonna
be good for you too, Jay.
Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:06:23):
Congress just told the d o J to scrap the
NFA for suppressors, SBRs, SPSS and AOWS. So if that
finally goes to which it looks like it is because
the uh, because Congress is telling them, no, we pass
these things. You have to stop. You know, Yeah, you
can finally get a suppressor for your six five. I
(01:06:45):
genuinely thought you were about to say that school to
be going back to normal. No, but because you know,
I've been wanting to get a suppressor for my Hey,
our pistol, which it's an SBR. Come on, I mean,
you know it's it is. You know, let's call a
(01:07:08):
spade a spade. I mean, the only reason why I
don't have it in my truck as a truck gun
is because of the issues. Yes, it is an AR pistol.
It's a pistol. That's all you have to say. But
I'd just rather not deal with the questions. I've got
my block, so you know, but once the NFA, once
(01:07:31):
SBRs are offering completely, it's gonna be my truck gun.
It's going to be in there at all times, right
with me, you know, just betther step away from Oh well,
speaking of cops, I got to a little fender bend
d I forgot to tell you, really, Yes, and Twitch
and Skittles were in the truck because we're pulling out
of the school parking lot. Okay, And it happens there
(01:07:53):
all the time. The person in front turning onto one
ninety two, you know, going to pull into traffic, Well
start rolling like they're gonna go, so you try and
go behind them. And then they hesitate and they step
on their brakes all of a sudden, then you bump
into them. So I mean it was a small fender bender.
I mean, didn't do shit to the age too. She
was driving. It was like a key of Sportage, a
(01:08:15):
like newer one, so crumpled her red hatch. Didn't break
the glass or anything. It's not major damage or anything.
But still the cop didn't even give me a ticket,
no citation. You know, Christmas is beyond that. Well yeah,
I mean, you know, the cop was really cool with me.
I mean, you know, he even stuck a said and
(01:08:36):
afterwards because what he said something to the effect of,
because you know, like you were so such a you know,
like nice guy whatever, blah blah blah. I didn't give
him any attitude, you know, so on and so forth.
He's like, I'm not even gonna write your ticket. You
give it a bad enough day, were right, Just get
your kids home. You know. It's that and the other.
And I use that as a learning experience, like luck
to the kids. It's like nine times out of ten,
(01:08:58):
if you were cool and respectful to the cop, they're
gonna be just same now they are human. He could
have a bad day. You know, his wife could have whatever,
gotten a big fight with them or whatever. It's not
even that it's the last call that they just came from. Yeah,
exactly right, you know. I mean, you know, he could
be having a bad day. So no matter how nice
you are, he's going to be a dick to you.
(01:09:20):
But that's the odd you know. It's usually you're cool
with them, they're cool with you, show them respect, laugh
a little bit, you know whatever. However, that is your
twenty five years streak over. Yeah, twenty five years, no
accidents over twenty years, no ticket, didn't get a ticket,
that's done. But still it was just happened. Yeah, I
(01:09:40):
was like him, Yeah, you know, she didn't speak English
at all, but you know, I speak a little bit
of Spanish. I was able to communicate with her a
little bit when a copying up. But he didn't speak
any Spanish either, so he had a call that help too. Yeah,
so he had a call of backup that could ran late,
you know, but so it went pretty cool. But yeah,
(01:10:03):
the hummer was just like laughed it off. The no
air bags deployed or nothing. It was five mile an hour.
You know, it's nothing to because I swear she started
rolling forward. So I looked to my left for the
on because this is one ninety two at three o'clock,
you know, that is what did you do? Yeah, so
I looked to the left to make sure that it
was clear. I assumed. You should never assume, because when
(01:10:26):
you assume, you make an ass out of you and me.
I assume that she continued rolling forward, you know, because
she was getting ready to go. So I wom bunk,
damn it.
Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
You know, I was like, okay, you know, it was
like a freaking bully knocking over, knocking over, and it
was like.
Speaker 1 (01:10:47):
Like twitching and stuff. So yeah, so you know, that
was kind of interesting. They got to experience their first
fender bender. A not a big accident or anything. It happens,
but yeah, it it, It does happen. Just wait until
you like roll your first vehicle. That's a whole other
(01:11:08):
expense that well. Sometimes it's fun though, sometimes it's fun. No,
just not the hummer. Yeah, the polease don't the K
five maybe, because that's gonna like once you get the
external the jeep.
Speaker 2 (01:11:25):
He got out there pretty pretty good. Yeah, I mean
that was amazing. How many times do you roll yeah,
I'm freaking that's scary.
Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
And I'm driving the Hummer and you know, I'm following
all the rules, doing my thing, and then out of nowhere,
a freaking grave digger just decides to crash into the Like,
eighty miles an hour is not really much taken doing again.
Speaker 1 (01:11:46):
Exactly, No, No, that's true. I mean most of the
time it's not you, it's the other somebody else. They're texting,
they're drinking, they're doing whatever, they're not paying attention. They're
road racing, which I mean again, people that know from
my past will say, you're a hypocrite. You can't talk
shit about road racing because I used to be street racing.
(01:12:08):
We're all dumb. Guilty, guilty as charged. From seventeen to
about twenty three, twenty four. Yeah, I terrorized the roads
with fire. I lost my license over it. Yeah, I
lost them a couple of times, you know exactly like
(01:12:29):
back in the day. But we always tried to keep
it in lightly populated, more isolated areas. You know. The
only time that we didn't and was us one down
by Dayline Mall in Miami, because again, like I said,
that's where everyone Oh yeah, the European supercars, the old
(01:12:53):
muscle cars. We'd all just roll up to a light,
usually right there by Dayland Mall. It was four lanes
across either way. Yep, you'd see Porsche, Lamborghini, seventy Boss, Mustang,
Kudo whatever. It just all pull up. We'd all look
at each other, Okay, let's go. It has to go,
(01:13:14):
you know. And the cops knew it, you know, I mean,
you know, it was stupid. Do as they say that
as I did.
Speaker 2 (01:13:24):
There wasn't as much traffic back then as there is now. Yeah,
and it's way more dangerous now.
Speaker 1 (01:13:28):
It's way more dangerous now. And the cops are a
lot different now too, partly because of laws and because
of the computers and what they have to do. I
mean back then, I knew a lot of the cops anyways,
and you'd run most of the time. You'd get away
and you'd see the same cop two three days later,
and they'd give you that look like next time, I'll
(01:13:50):
get you next time, you know, like I see what
you did. I'm watching you. Yeah, you know, I'll let
them take off, and I got your planting. I'm gonna
be at your house. But it's like I mean, you know,
it's like we actually had a like like a mutual respects,
Like you know, they knew what we did and and they're,
(01:14:13):
you know, they're like, yeah, I did it too when
I was a kid, so I know, you know. But
and sometimes they would catch us, and you know, I
was always cool with them and like yeah, you got
me this time. Whatever, you know, But it happens. But
like that one guy that just killed uh, he was
(01:14:33):
street racing with a tampa and he uh crashed into
a Yeah, the bar out the outdoors heating killed four
or five people. Because if you're gonna do it, I
don't suggest doing it, but if you're gonna do it,
don't do it in a crowded where there's people.
Speaker 2 (01:14:52):
Did you see where the media try to take it,
and they just like they did not go very far
because it was a gay bar. They right, They tried
so hard to say that the guy was meaning to
do it at a gay bar.
Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
No, the guy lost control and and.
Speaker 2 (01:15:08):
That's the last thing you heard about it because it
wasn't true that he was trying to run people over
because they were gay.
Speaker 1 (01:15:15):
Okay, okay, okay, Now some some more some more prepping stuff.
Earth changes. Those ex flares have been popping off left
and right. So, uh, what was it Wednesday that happened right, Tuesday? Wednesday? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Tuesday Wednesday, because it was like three or four days
back to back. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:15:35):
So we had this lady come in and her radio
was full blast, like is this static?
Speaker 1 (01:15:42):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:15:42):
And she like jumps out of the car and she's like,
I don't know what to do, and we're just like
we've never seen this before. So I go out to
the car and I'm like, I can't hear nothing, Like
it's too much, you know, the car can go up
that loud, and we disconnected the battery and she's like,
centered it is. They were just stopping a light and
it just went and it's like wow.
Speaker 1 (01:16:05):
Well there were in the space of those three or
four days, you had a one point seven X flare,
then a five point one, and then a four point zero,
causing all kinds of havoc with electronics. Full blackout hit
the Dominican Republic. Actually, as Cruise scrambled to uh did
(01:16:31):
I print that one out? Let me see? Uh No, No,
I didn't print that one out though, But yeah, as
crews scrambled to restore power. Northern lights were seen as
far south as Texas and parts of North Florida. You know. So,
I mean, folks, it's you gotta be the the lights
(01:16:53):
are gonna go out, you know, be it man made
MP or cyber attack or natural.
Speaker 2 (01:16:59):
Yeah, I mean, but it's gonna happen.
Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
We don't know when, but why not be prepared prepared
for it, you know, And it's happening more and more.
The sun is the sun goes through its active phases
and it's you know, non active phases. We are going
into a Grand solar minimum, which when people hear that
they say, oh, that Sun's not going to be active.
That's not what that means. Grand solar like minimum means, yes,
(01:17:26):
there are fewer sunspots and temperatures tend to drop. But
when there are sun spots during a like minimum, you
get large CMEs, you know, so there's not as many,
but when it happens, it's boom, it's immediately it tends
(01:17:48):
to be worse. So now, supposedly where we are here
in central Florida, you couldn't see them with the naked
eye can but with a camera you could. You know,
you had to be up around Pitsacola to be able
to see it with the naked eye. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:18:08):
I got the wife on the roof because She's like,
I wanted to see it, and I'm like, Okay, get
on the roof and get your camera out and kind
of see it.
Speaker 1 (01:18:15):
Yeah. It wasn't very very good, but I saw some
photographs of the panhandle and stuff and it was it
was beautiful. It was really cool. Yeah, you still haven't
seen anything like that. Twitch. I mean, hopefully soon you'll
get to see it. Yeah, you got to see that.
That's pretty cool, and hopefully it's see what the thing
(01:18:35):
is if you can, if it's strong enough to be
able to see it with the naked eye down here,
I think it's gonna be like one of those like
Carrington event. It's like goosebumps. It'd be the last pretty
thing you see before the lights go out. Yeah, you know,
but again, be thankful that you're here. Yeah, with us
(01:18:59):
right safe, not living like in Atlanta in the city
or something like that. Denver, Yeah, Denver, but Walking Dead.
I like to go to that. Look at Atlanta in
The Walking Dead, you know, love it. So where would
(01:19:22):
you rather be? Twitch?
Speaker 3 (01:19:25):
Well, uh, if we look at season two, Maggie's Little
Farm surroved a lot longer than Atlanta, So.
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
Yeah, and the only reason why they lost that was
because of other issues, right internest. So, but had those
things not happened, you know, that would have been a
nice place, you know, nice beautiful, Yeah exactly. I mean,
like us out here, we're not far enough to be
(01:19:56):
like that that is ideal. Yeah, We're close enough to
the city to be able to do supply runs, yes,
you know, but far enough from the city and defendable
enough to where, yeah where if it was a walking
dead scenario, we'd be pretty good here. Oh yeah, Yeah.
(01:20:19):
There's plenty of stuff between us and them, and we've
all we've always talked about how you know, yeah, there's
no such thing as zombies, of course, but in a
true shit hit hit the fan scenario, the we call
the zombie hordes are the hungry, sick people that are
fleeing the big cities because they're gonna look like zombies,
(01:20:43):
you know, hungry, dying of thirst, injured, sick, walking in herds. Yeah,
you know, like you know, like basically picking everything clean.
And some of them that do have guns and weapons, raping,
pillaging and plundering, you know, So there are different places
(01:21:07):
that are good to be and not good to be.
Like you know, some people say, well, you're so close,
they're gonna just come right to you. Not necessarily, They're
gonna follow the path of least resistance. They're gonna go
down I four, they're gonna go down, They're gonna walk
down the turnpike. They're gonna walk down those places. So now, yeah, exactly,
(01:21:28):
but and you know, so you have to think out
of all the people walking, let's say the ones coming
from let's say Miami coming north right turnpike. You're right turnpike.
Now we aren't too far from the turnpike. But how
many of those people A know, we're here. B Some
people are gonna exit off in certain ramps to look
(01:21:51):
at scavenge, you know. So some of them will get
off the turnpike at some of them might get off
the turn this far right but to again, and then
some of them will keep going on that with it,
some will break off, some will break off. So by
the time there's actually a group coming down our area,
it's gonna be a couple of hundred.
Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
Maybe, you know, we'll probably be going to them.
Speaker 1 (01:22:16):
At that point, because if the drones in the air,
you know, we see him coming from a mile away,
you know, we mount, you know, like twitch up on
the roof, you know, up in the crow's nest. I'll see.
Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
You mentioned that that that zombies aren't a thing, that
it's becoming less and less every day.
Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
Well you got you know, Flaca seen it like it's.
Speaker 3 (01:22:38):
Have you seen some of those animals that like freaking
plants or funk guys are taking over their bodies.
Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
Yeah, the rabbits well, and and uh, the one he's
talking about is, uh, it's the fungus. It's the plant
fungus that they base the Last of Us off of.
In real life, the fungus gets into ants and and
it ends up controlling the ant's mind, making the ant
(01:23:05):
basically climb up to the highest you know thing in
the tree and then it dies up there and then
the spores come out of it to spread out to
other So in the Last of Us it was basically
the theory was the same type of thing, but it
jumps species. It goes out of the insects and gets
(01:23:27):
into higher like mammals and people, and it's kind of
like rabbits and stuff. Like that. Yeah, which you know,
I mean that could happen, you know, that's that's always
I'm not saying zombies are impossible, but undead zombies, yeah,
you know that's not possible. But if you're talking about
(01:23:47):
zombies like in uh freaking later Later, they're not dead.
They've got the rage virus. Yeah you know so or
that movie, that other movie inside the Building where that
weird strain of rabies and they were locked in we
(01:24:08):
remember it's one of those like recorded movies, right yeah, yeah, yeah,
it was one of those like cam Quarterer movies. You know.
Oh god, uh contagent no no, no, no, no, no,
not contagent. But it was basically this weird strain of
rabies that makes people hyper violent. You know, they're not
undead there. Uh. And the whole movie took place inside
(01:24:32):
this apartment building and the people are like locked in
there because the CDC or whoever they locked the building
down and the people were trying to get out. Damn.
It's a pretty pretty I haven't seen that one yet. Yeah, spoiler,
everyone dies, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:24:49):
Of course they're stupid ways for no reason, like it
makes the rabies guys super strong and aggressive and somehow
makes all the regular people unbelieve stupid.
Speaker 1 (01:25:01):
Well, you know, and you think the one girl might
live at the very end and she's allows them that
gets drugged off. Yes, I love spoiling it for people. Okay,
so yeah, so you know. Oh and plus remember was
it twenty eleven the nine point one quake off of Japan. Yep,
(01:25:23):
the same spot that that happened. When that one happened.
Prior to the nine point one, there was a quake
swarm of five sixes, sevens and then boom it popped. Well,
that same spot. Over the last couple of weeks there
have been five sixes and sevens, and they're starting to
(01:25:45):
say there's a chance of another like mega quake striking there,
especially considering all the flaring, because again, how we've talked
about on the show, large solar flares tend to help
trigger large quakes. So if it's a ready they ready,
it could be like ready to pop another eight or
(01:26:06):
nine there again, which means possible tsunamis. So on and
so forth, and we see what tsunamis can do. I'm
worried more about not not there off the coast of
pr on the the the Puerto Rican Trench, on the
north shore. They've found evidence of massive landslides in that
(01:26:34):
trench which have caused tsunamis to hit the east coast
of the US, some of them pretty large, kind of
like the one that hit hit Sumatra. You know, I mean,
we're fine where we are far inland, but still one
hundred foot wave. Look at what it did to Sumatra.
So imagining that hitting the Keys, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Daytona Beach,
(01:27:00):
you know, everything right up the coast, everything one hundred
foot wave. They say, everything up to about five miles
inland is going to be done done for. And look
at Miami. Five miles inland is that's all of Miami.
You know, when I lived there, I was about eight
(01:27:20):
miles inland, and that was already at the time was
on the edge of about three or four miles, like
west of West was farms. Now it's subdivisions going out
further course. But Miami itself, the city of Miami, that
only extends in about three miles, you know, I mean,
(01:27:43):
it's done. Yeah, and it like a lot of these faults,
they say it's overdue, but again, when you're looking on
geologic time scales, it could happen tomorrow. It could happen
one hundred years from now. We have no idea, but
with the Earth becoming more active with the sun, with
what it's doing, it's not something to panic about, but
(01:28:06):
it's something that you you should keep it in the
back of your mind that that fault can go. It
has before and if it does, and if you live
on the coast, that's why you need to be aware
of what's going on, because it's gonna take a little
while for it to get here. You know. Tsunamis you know, yeah,
(01:28:27):
tsunamis moving about four to five hundred miles an hour,
so if it's you know, it'll take you know, three
or four hours for it to get here.
Speaker 2 (01:28:37):
You know, you've got plenty of time, right if you.
Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
Are paying attention now, if all you do is listen
to podcasts, which I love you listening, but you don't
listen you know, you don't have the news on occasionally,
or you can listen to a podcast, but have your
you know, other like radio onto news station, just because
you never know what can happen. Spota has gotten much
(01:29:03):
better about it. She would never turn on the news
in her view, and I always told her and said,
you know, I know news can be boring, but if
you're gonna be driving to work, at least the first
ten minutes, yeah, turn on the news yep, to get
your traffic so you know if there's an accident, so
you know, not to go a certain direction so you're
(01:29:23):
not late to work or whatever, you know, or like whatever,
just so you get a general idea of what's going on. Yeah,
and then turn on your music, you know, but just
ten minutes just so you know what's going on. Because
so many times I've had to call her up. I'm
listening to the news. There's an accident where you usually
go on four to seventeen, So don't take the fourth
of them, you know, thank you, because if I didn't
(01:29:45):
tell her, she wouldn't have known, yeah, and she'd be
stuck in that traffic. Yep. She's gotten better about it now,
but so yeah, definitely you've got to check those things out.
So if something like that was to happen, you're only
gonna have a couple two, three, four hours depending because
if you wait, once those roads get blocked up, you're
(01:30:08):
not going nowhere was it deep impact the scene where
all the cars are stuck, it's in uh just outside
of DC. They're trying to get out, but then the
waves coming. Yeah, and the parents give the baby to
(01:30:28):
the to the guy and girl on the on the
on the right. Yeah, they were able to get up
high and get out, but everyone else there just got Yep,
they couldn't, you know, because they were stuck in traffic. Uh.
Independence Day perfect. They're all stuck in traffic, you know,
because people waited until it was too late to get out,
(01:30:51):
you know, I mean, what's the worst that's gonna happen.
You jump the gun and leave too early, and like
nothing happens, so you go back home. Yeah, you know,
but if you wait, well, maybe it's not gonna happen here,
well maybe this and the other and then all of
a sudden, no, we gotta get out. Yeah, and then
(01:31:11):
you go to and you ain't going nowhere unless you
got a helicopter. At the end of the roads are blocked.
Even with that, I mean, if you have a dirt
bike like the kid did, you can get around. But
you know, if you got it, even if you have
a jeep I'm sorry, you know, or a hummer you
could push some vehicles out of the way. You can
go off road to a point. But if you're stuck
out the highway, you can't. You're stuck. There's cars all
(01:31:34):
around you, guardrails, you know. You just you can't get out,
you know, So just definitely check those things out. On
the home front, there is a chemical disaster in Oklahoma.
A thousand evacuated because of a ammonia leak, sending dozens
to a hospital. At least seven victims remain hospitalized as
(01:31:58):
Oklahoma town cleans up a leak of ammonia gass a
small town. Astorities focus on how the gas began spewing
out of the tanker truck that was carrying it. The
leak Wednesday night from a truck outside hotel in Weatherford
forced at least five to six hundred people to evacuate
their homes early Thursday, while others are orditory meet inside
(01:32:21):
there's for several hours, firefighters went door to door to
tell those who needed to leave to leave. Truck was
carrying twenty five pounds of ammonia, and the US Environmental
Environmental Protection Agency blamed a leaky gasket for the release
of the gas. See and it's not even a terrorist attack.
It's nothing major. It's just a worn out gasket and
(01:32:43):
ammonia or chlorine, any of those things deadly. You never know.
So it's parked out in front of the motel because
the truckers trying to get a little sleep Yep, you know,
you're sleeping in the next room over the trucks parked
out front, and this stuff starts leaking, goes into the
ac unit because you got your agent. It's Florida. You
(01:33:05):
got the acon sucks the air from outside.
Speaker 2 (01:33:07):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (01:33:07):
Next thing you know, your eyes are bleeding, your lungs
are bleeding, and you're hot, and you're dead. You've got
to be prepared. That doesn't mean keep your gas mask
with you twenty four seven. I mean I usually you
keep it in your vehicle. Yeah. So if you're sleeping
in the hotel room, with the hotel room.
Speaker 2 (01:33:30):
Exactly, okay, everything goes up there, good, good, good.
Speaker 1 (01:33:33):
Yeah. But most people don't have that. So again, it's
be observed in what's going on around you. If I
don't stay in hotels often, but when I do, twitch
you've seen me, you know, I look at what's in
the parking lot, I check and see what's going on
around I'm constantly like listening I'm not paranoid, but if
(01:33:55):
I see a tanker truck of ammonia pulling up the
park out there, you know, I'm gonna be like, I
don't think anything the farious. The guy needs to sleep,
he's been on the road, understandable, you know, but that
is gonna raise a flag me. This is something that
I need to pay tention to to just in case,
(01:34:16):
you know, hell, I might even go up to the
guy and be like, you know, yo, how you doing?
You know how how how long you've been driving? I
see it's ammonia whatever, it's chlorine, whatever it is. You know,
how's the truck doing? How's those gaskets? You know, anything happen?
(01:34:37):
You know, some stupid kids go out there and shoot, yeah,
you know. I mean it could be a liquid nitrogen
truck and somebody can hit it and you could be
like you can end up like you know, the two
one thousand. I don't know what would be the worst
way to go. I don't know, choking on your own
(01:34:57):
blood because your lungs are bleeding, or or or freezing solid.
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:35:07):
I mean, freezing solid is pretty quick.
Speaker 1 (01:35:09):
It's pretty quick.
Speaker 2 (01:35:10):
Yeah, either one, It's still what.
Speaker 1 (01:35:15):
Would you rather the choking and dying on your own blood. Oh,
he wants to suffer like that?
Speaker 3 (01:35:27):
That could be closer to like drowning. Yeah, and the
phrasing to death. Let's say if you get frozen or
something like that, and you're still somehow alive for the
next like a couple of seconds before you shut down completely,
and let's say like a part of you fall falls off,
you're pretty much watching yourself fall apart.
Speaker 1 (01:35:48):
Oh yeah, that would be weird. Like you watch your
arm break off and stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
Wow, that like you're still conscious, You're like you can't move,
but you're just looking around and then you see your
arm break off in front of you.
Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
That was or am I used?
Speaker 2 (01:36:01):
At least you're not seeing blood like shoot out so yeah, true,
you're not bleeding out.
Speaker 1 (01:36:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:36:06):
I think they're equally bad in different ways.
Speaker 1 (01:36:12):
Let me see, like what else? Oh more from the
peaceful tolerant left, the radical left is planning a day
of rage. Liberals storm politicians offices over Trump. Far left
groups will will make their way to Capitol Hill on
November twentieth and twenty first to participate in Remove the
(01:36:35):
Regime protests. In a promotional video for the event that
has gone viral and X, a man who's one of
the organizers, stated quote, we have to remove the regime,
and there's only one way to remove him, Trump from power.
Good luck. Yeah, so January sixth is too far?
Speaker 2 (01:36:52):
Yeah, yeah, so what can't they do it on January sixth?
It's only a month away, right or something like that.
Speaker 1 (01:37:01):
But so, folks, just stare in your toes. These people
are crazy. They're nuts, especially if you live in a
in a capital city, you know, not just DC, but
like you know, if you in Florida, if you're in
Tallahassee or in Colorado, it's Denver. Is it is Denver
(01:37:24):
the capital? Yeah, it's okay, it's been so long since
I've been there, because I know a lot of states
have weird capitals that are like it's some small town.
Speaker 2 (01:37:31):
Yeah, it's like why It's like people would think there's
nothing there.
Speaker 1 (01:37:34):
That Miami or Orlando would be the capital of Florida,
you know, this little weird Yeah. So if you live
in a place where there's lots of government offices, just
be on your toes because if political violence is going
to happen, that's where it's gonna happen. Carry within the
(01:37:57):
legal bounds of your state. You know, I mean, I
hate saying that, but but you also don't want to
go to jail over you know. I mean people, good
people get popped all the time in these states, like
in New York. You know how many times has it
(01:38:20):
happened in the last five or ten years. You're traveling,
you're in a layover in New York. Yeah, your gun
is properly packed per the TSA. You know, it's not
on you, it's in your luggage that goes and so
it's you've done everything legal, everything right from Florida. And
(01:38:41):
let's say you're going to Ohio like whatever it is,
and you have a layover in New York. There have
been many instances where the person gets arrested for having
a gun in the state. Yeah, even though they did
nothing wrong. Well, they were per the essay. It's not
(01:39:01):
really boxed and locked and everything.
Speaker 2 (01:39:04):
It's the possession of the state, isn't it at that time? Yeah,
you know, why are they getting arrested? But and there, Yeah,
you gave them their firearm, right, yeah, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:39:14):
And they're being and they're actually being convicted, you know.
So that's why I have to put that caveat out there.
It's because even though you and I know you should
be able to protect yourself your family, of course, I mean,
you know, and as I say, I I'd rather be
judged by twelve than carried by six. Yes, you know.
(01:39:38):
But with that said, do you really want to go
through all the legal problems and hundreds of thousands of
dollars of legal fees or spending time in jail and
losing your job. So that's what I say, depending on
what the laws are in the state that you happen
to live in, to the best of your ability, followed
(01:40:02):
those laws so you don't end up on the wrong
side of shit hits the fan and there's no law anymore.
That's a whole nother story. They want do what you
gotta do. Yeah, you know, But until then, that's why
it's thank god. Florida, Texas, certain other states that are
very Colorado used to be. Man, they used to be
really good about it. You know. Now they've gone so
(01:40:24):
far left, they're going so California saying funny, first hand
gun I ever bought was in Colorado nineteen ninety one,
right before the whole registry and all that. That was
my my P eighty five you know, you know, so
that was I bought that and I bought my SKS
(01:40:44):
there ninety nine dollars. I can't believe that my first
two gun gun buys. The SKS and the P eighty five.
That was many many years ago. You still have those? Yeah? Yeah, yeah,
the uh you've seen my PAT five. Yeah, I was
(01:41:05):
carrying that as my carry up until I got the
block what two years ago? Now, so I've been carrying
the PAD five for thirty years. Wow, you know? And
but yeah, now I carry the glock. It finally deserves retirement. Yeah.
I mean it's a it's a good gun. Uh, it's
(01:41:26):
full frame, it's solid metal. So if I did run
out of vambo, I can beat you to death with it.
I mean whatever. It weighs more than the block, let's
put it that way. It works, but it does work. Yes,
forty two days after the government shut down started, it
ended que the crickets. Now, unless you were a truly
(01:41:51):
a person in need of snap assistance when and there
are some single moms whatever, But unless you were that,
did anybody else really noticed? Or if you were traveling
because the air draft controllers, you know, they shut down
some stuff. So except for those two instances, really did
the vast majority of Americans even notice that the government
(01:42:14):
was shut down? I did. I was able to walk
in the grocery store and everything was there. Oh okay, yeah,
that's a good thing.
Speaker 2 (01:42:20):
And then I walked into the grocery store like today,
and I see all these people with full fool buggies, buggies.
I'm like, what the hell, I'm looking down at my stuff.
I'm like, man, I got three things. Yeah, I spent
one hundred dollars. I'm like, damn, I know.
Speaker 1 (01:42:38):
I mean, it's.
Speaker 2 (01:42:43):
What about this two thousand dollars check that's supposed to
go out for people that make under one hundred thousand?
Speaker 1 (01:42:50):
Under hundred thousand, right, yeah, so.
Speaker 2 (01:42:53):
What about the people that are actually making a little
bit more, that's little middle class?
Speaker 1 (01:42:58):
Yeah, I'm sure out of luck. It's like a kick
on the mall's yeah. I mean, but I see why
he's doing it that way too. In the state of Florida,
you need to be making as a family anywhere from
one hundred to one hundred and twenty thousand dollars to
(01:43:18):
get by decently, you know, to be actual middle class.
So if you have two people each making you know, see,
twenty two bucks an hour is about forty five thousand
a year. So if you're making twenty five bucks an hour,
you know, husband's making it, wife's making it. You're making
about one hundred, one hundred and ten thousand a year.
(01:43:39):
You're doing okay, you know. And that's not crazy, you know,
but it's definitely not like what it used to be.
I remember when my wife and I first got married,
this is two thousand and two, and we were broke,
you know, like most young couples, you know. I remember
(01:44:00):
sitting there thinking, Man, if we could only make forty
thousand between the two of us, you know, will be okay,
We'll be able to you know, take care of take
care of stuff. Yeah. Now now it's like again, you've
got to be making dawn. You've got to be making
two to three times that, Yeah, to just get by twitch.
(01:44:24):
I'm so sorry. I mean the way things were to
the way.
Speaker 3 (01:44:30):
Things are, you know, Like I've seen the name way
too many times how my parents describe living back then
the world deciding to give up now as soon as
that become an adult.
Speaker 1 (01:44:45):
Well, and that's one of the things that as a
gen zer, you know, going to be turning sixteen now,
so in many cultures that you're considered an adult. Honestly,
I mean eighteen is what we consider here legally whatever.
(01:45:05):
But in most cultures throughout history, by the time you
were fifteen or sixteen, you were already taking over most
of the duties of the farm, right and like whatever.
You know, Hell, you're getting married, you know, you know,
with what you see, politics, earth changes, you know, prepper survival,
(01:45:37):
the whole thing. And knowing some of your friends, you know,
having a pulse of what they're thinking about you now.
Granted I know a lot of they're thinking about games,
playing whatever, but I know it comes up in school sometimes,
you know, your history teacher will start talking about stuff,
or you're that it's doing a government and civics. You know,
(01:46:03):
they'll start talking about politics and stuff. What are some
of your friends in your age group fifteen sixteen or so,
where are where is their mindset? Where are they at
in terms of the world today and their futures as
opposed to what you are seeing with what you know,
(01:46:27):
what you've learned, and so on and so forth.
Speaker 3 (01:46:29):
Well, right now, most of them are doing dual enrollment
doing their protests and all that stuff, getting ready for college. Right,
other than that, we're just trying to enjoy life until
it's a requirement for us to take it seriously, like
just mess around, be retarded, play games, do whatever. And
then when we turn eighteen and we need to start
(01:46:49):
taking things seriously, then just all happiness goes away.
Speaker 1 (01:46:52):
But yeah, I'm fifteen, I still play retard, I did do.
Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
I'm not doing any of that college stuff at all
because I just see no reason to do college for
who knows however many years for a degree that you're
rarely or ever gonna use, and then you're just gonna
be stuck working at McDonald's, however, many hundreds of thousands
of dollars, and depending on which college you go to,
working your entire life to work to work it off.
(01:47:22):
Even though you have these big dreams for yourself, you're
working at McDonald's for maybe even below minimum age and
just not working well at all.
Speaker 1 (01:47:31):
Right, So that's why you're playing on doing something in
the tech field a trade. Yeah, you know, be it welding, plumbing, whatever,
auto mechanics, whatever, but something in the trades, high demand
job that requires like physical works something, right, that will
always be there regardless. I mean there's always to be
If there are houses, there's plumbing, yes, you know, if
(01:47:55):
there's houses, there's lights and air conditioning. You know, all
that stuff needs to be fixed.
Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
The jobs that it'll take AI that it'll take AI long,
the story of place.
Speaker 1 (01:48:05):
Yeah, because I mean eventually you'll have fully sentient data
type robots that don't go. But that's a ways down
the way. You know it's gonna happen eventually, but it's
happening now. Yeah, but you know, still those are gonna
be the for your generation, probably the safest after that.
(01:48:26):
I don't know, although I'm not sure we're gonna be
here after that generation anyways, like Einstein said, no, like
like was it Einstein that said, I don't know what
World War three is gonna be fought with the World
War four is gonna be fought with sticks and stones
because three.
Speaker 2 (01:48:44):
Is gonna yeah, nothing left.
Speaker 1 (01:48:49):
But so have I know, you've got the armored backpack
you take to school, and I know you talked to
some of your friends some of the stuff that you do,
you know, the shooting and stuff. Yeah, you know, what
do they say about your prepper stuff in general?
Speaker 3 (01:49:12):
I think it's cool, which is good. Okay, they're not
really against it. They get the idea, they understand it
mostly that they're not really doing too too much of
it themselves. But they're not like trash gun it or anything.
They're like, that's cool.
Speaker 1 (01:49:28):
That's cool, you know, because I've seen a lot of
who was like, oh, you're one of those preppers, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:49:33):
Yeah, And again I've only really shared that with like
three of three of them, but those three seemed chill.
Speaker 1 (01:49:39):
Right right, And those three have met me and they
kind of like me, so they like you more than me.
So I'm a cool guy, you know. I mean, everyone
loves bondsai. You know, I can't help it now. This
is something that you know of quite bit, and I
(01:50:00):
do as well too. From living in Miami for over
twenty years. The Latin Kings like one of the gangs
down there. They have issued a shoot on site order
against federal agents in Blue Cities yep, awesome. Federal agents
in Chicago are on high alert after the Latin King
(01:50:22):
gang leaders reportedly ordered a shoot on site directive against
Customs and Border Protection officers. According to an internal agency
warning obtained by News Nation, officers and agents are reminded
to maintain heightened situational awareness and exercise extreme caution when
conducting enforcement activities. The alert read the chilling threat follows
weekend immigration raid in the city's Little Village neighborhood, where
(01:50:46):
shocked for a fire and at federal agents and attackers
hurled a paint can and bricks at Border patrol vehicles.
Blah blah blah blah blah blah. Spider man coming from Miami.
The two big ones down there when I was growing
up were the Latin Kings and the Latin Disciples. The
Kings were bigger than the Disciples. Of course you had
(01:51:10):
some of the bloods and crips, but but they really
that's more an outwet Denver, California, all out west uh
here it was. It was the Latin Kings and Latin Disciples,
and I used to see their tags all over the place.
The weird part is I used to you know, I
(01:51:33):
guess it's my main character plot Armor growing up. Back then,
I used to walk the streets two three in the
morning by myself, right, and I knew there was a
lot of gang activity there. I wasn't a part of
any of it, but no one ever messed with me.
Speaker 2 (01:51:51):
You know, they're not out to mess with you particularly. Yeah,
like they're they're there to do what they're doing, like drugs, right, you.
Speaker 1 (01:52:00):
Know, because I see the stuff that you see like
in New York and some of these other big cities
where they don't care you walk in on the wrong turf.
They're gonna do whatever. You know, in Miami at least
back then, we're talking the eighties, you know, those are
og Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:52:18):
You know, they had a respect for everybody else unless
you stepped on their.
Speaker 1 (01:52:21):
Toes, right, you know, they left you alone, so and
so forth. You know. Okay, I look back now and
it's like, you know, even though I carry, I would
think twice about walking through some of these even here,
I used to walk when I was dating this girl
in the late nineties where she lived off of like
(01:52:42):
uh Dire in one yeah, and to Kasimi and I
used to walk uh Old Dixie Highway, that little backway there.
It's not a good neighborhood, you know. There's lots of activity. Yeah,
lots of activity back there. And I was in my
(01:53:05):
late twenties, early thirties, you know, right before I got married,
you know, so I was like twenty nine thirty and
never thought twice about it. Yeah, you know, I drive
through there now and I'm just like, I was freaking stupid.
I was. You know, It's like and I didn't carry
(01:53:27):
back then because I didn't have my concealed yet, you know,
I mean I always had knives on me and stiff.
But still it was just like, you know, I was
just like, It's like, what was I thinking? But so
I mean again, folks, stay alert situational awareness. If you
(01:53:48):
live in a rural area, you know, not so much,
but you'd really be surprised these gangs are spreading their
tendrils out even into like rural areas, especially if you
have places, I hate to say it, like hold up
all here where you've got the uh meth houses.
Speaker 2 (01:54:07):
Well that's where everything comes from, right, and that's it
goes to the big cities, and that's where it's distributed
out of and you know it's it's a whole big chain.
Speaker 1 (01:54:16):
Yeah, whips and chains could be fun, but not in
this instance. No, not in this instance. So yes, they
are here in Florida too, So folks, just keep on
the alert. That's the full blackout thing we were talking about.
Last thing we're gonna hit here. Some of the World
War three news US missal ships off of Venezuela. The
(01:54:43):
largest US aircraft carrier arrives in the Caribbean Sea near Venezuela.
So then an entire f a foe. Trump's getting ready
to go in. And I understand why because I mean,
if any other country cause the deaths of one hundred
(01:55:06):
thousand plus Americans in a year, war would be declared
against that country.
Speaker 2 (01:55:14):
I mean it already has really.
Speaker 1 (01:55:17):
Coming in fentanyl and all that kills you know, hundreds
of thousands, hundreds of thousands of people in this country
every year. I think it is more than beyond time
them right to treat them as enemy combatants, as terrorists.
(01:55:44):
As you know, it is a war, and not the
war on drugs from back in the eighties or just
saying no I love Reagan, you know and all that,
but but but the wole just say no, no, we
need to take it to them because those cartels, most
of those cartels, like we've talked about, they have their
own militaries that rival many of their countries. I mean
(01:56:07):
not our country. But if they're causing that many deaths
in our country, no, it's an active war on yes,
so we need to treat it as such. And I
think that's what Trump's doing. He's he's telling him, look,
you either stop doing you know, stop sending the drugs here,
or else We're gonna stop it.
Speaker 2 (01:56:27):
And that's gonna happen.
Speaker 1 (01:56:31):
Yes, it does. It definitely needs to happen. Now. Kiev,
where my wife's family is from. At least five killed,
more than two dozen injured in attacks on Kiev just
the last three or four days or was it here?
(01:56:54):
Russian drones and missiles strike even an overnight attack. Russian
forces launched massive drone and missile attack Keve early on Friday,
striking residential buildings and tickering explosions and fires and districts
throughout the capitol. The mayor said that eleven people were
injured for were being treated in hospital, including a pregnant
woman and one person in a very serious condition. Officials
(01:57:16):
said falling debris and fires damage high rise apartment buildings,
a school, and ath medical facility. And of course since
we have family there, we get reports constantly live from them.
Power's been out fourteen hours a day. Yea. Luckily we
(01:57:37):
were able to you know, our family there have solar
chargers and everything like that, because you know, when things
before they started happening, we were like we saw things
were gonna spark off. Yeah, three years ago, and I
said said, you know, because we gave them like one
(01:57:59):
of our credit cards to because money and everything. I was,
you know, I was like, go buy food, use a car,
don't worry about it. By this, solar charger, by this,
by this. Yeah. So now when the powers out everywhere else,
they can still charge their phones, their laptops, they can
run the refrigerator. You know, they could do certain things.
(01:58:20):
I mean, they can't run their whole apartment on it,
but they got they've got the essentials going, you know,
light a fan, whatever. I mean. I think, can you
imagine this being your everyday life, not knowing if today
is the day your home is hit. Do you think
(01:58:40):
that all because you live here in the USA, that
you are immune to this, that it can't or won't
happen here, Well, it canon it most likely will very soon.
So get prepared mentally, physically and spiritually. The war that's coming,
you know, it's World War three has already started. Yeah,
(01:59:01):
you know, it just hasn't gone fully hot yet but
if you look at all the little hotspots that have
flared up, especially what's going on with like NATO and
like Russia. I know you all have friends out there
that think, oh, everything's fine, nothing can happen to us
here now. Now, it is true, though, that the chances
(01:59:28):
of us being invaded by a foreign power are almost
nil because of the Atlantic and the Pacific Ocean, the
supply chain, the you know, for them to be able
to get their ships over here, and you know, logistics
would be impossible even if they did somehow make it here.
(01:59:50):
Then it's such a huge country, Rocky Mountains, Appalachians, yeah,
this any other again, you know, plus then the armed populous.
There's one hundred and twenty five guns for every hundred
people in this country. Go ahead, you know, so again
look at Red Dawn, you know. Yeah, they were able
to come up through Central America like Mexico, push up
(02:00:13):
for a little bit, but then it was done. We
were able to push back. So I'm not saying we
have to worry so much about it quote unquote land
invasion missiles. Well, yeah, cyber attacks, which can because we've
talked about it, you know, chaos, Uh, drone attacks, doesn't
(02:00:36):
even have to be nukes, you know, but just drone attacks,
like missile attacks. These people in Kiev and in many
other countries where this type of stuff happens, it's there
every day. Now. They still have to go to work,
you know, they still have to go to school. So
shit at the fan is not necessarily mad Max where
it's all wasteland. No shit at the fan can be.
(02:00:59):
U still have to go to work and go to school.
But yet you've got to worry about incoming missiles and bombs.
You've got to worry about snipers on rooftops. Yeah, Bosnia
back in the nineties, right, you know, there were snipers
on rooftops, so you had to go to the store.
You had to literally wall to wall kind of you
(02:01:22):
know zig zag too, you know, I mean it was insane.
What makes you think we are immune from that? Yeah,
you know, and it doesn't have to be from a
foreign invader cyber attack. We get hit that bad. The
civil war that's gonna start here, the gangs, there's gonna
be snipers on rooftops, There's gonna be all kinds of
(02:01:45):
crazy shit going on. So you have to be aware,
you have to be prepared. Mentally, physically, spiritually, start getting
your kids ready for it. You know it, don't scare them.
I mean, there's a that's one thing I'm glad twitch
that you and have. I know it bothered you guys
at first, you know, when we would talk about this stuff,
(02:02:08):
because you even said it several times. It's like, you know,
about how am I even going to get to graduate
high school? Am I going to get to go to prom?
Am I going to get to do those things? You know?
Am my? Honest, Stantia was probably hopefully. Hopefully. So it's
always plan on normality. Yeah, plan on going to college
(02:02:32):
or school, you know, trade school, college or whatever. Plan
on graduating, plan on getting married, plan on getting a job,
work towards those things, plan on having kids, Live your
life to the fullest. Yeah you can. But in the
event that shit does happen, be prepared, be ready so
that you can still survive and thrive regardless of what happens. Yeah,
(02:02:55):
you know, and I know a couple of years ago
you and Catrine both were having trouble wrapping your head
around that. But at what point did it finally start
syncing in that even though we believe all this stuff
is gonna happen. Probably it's not gonna be that bad.
Speaker 3 (02:03:16):
I don't know. It's just kind of like, over time
it just affected me less and less, where at first
I was still like we're all freaking dead, but it
was like a month after month, I was just like
I stopped caring as much at the point where now
it's the thing I said before, just trying to enjoy
(02:03:38):
life before I have to start taking it seriously, Like
freaking Mama's already talking about is already talking about me
having to get a job, and I'm just like, I
just want to freaking play games and be stupid Tom eighteen.
Speaker 1 (02:03:52):
And there's there's not anything wrong with that. It's good
to get a job, even if it's part time, you know,
just so you get that experience in and some extra
spending money so you can buy more games. Yeah, so
you could do some of those things that you want
to do without always having to look at me go please. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:04:09):
Speaking of which, the freaking hot tip, I'm not going
to say how much it was worth, but it was
pretty pricey.
Speaker 1 (02:04:13):
And you still give me crap over two dollars in
a game.
Speaker 2 (02:04:18):
Well, yeah, but you got to look at how hard
he's worked for what he has.
Speaker 1 (02:04:22):
Yeah, you know he deserves that. Yeah, And it's not
like you. It's not that you don don't deserve it,
but it's I mean when he when he sometimes brings
up like you know, it's only twenty dollars, it's only
thirty dollars. Yeah, I'm like, well, in the last eighteen months,
(02:04:42):
let me see this block six' five body armor helmet
and that, night.
Speaker 2 (02:04:51):
It all adds up for real. Quick it's all expensive.
Speaker 1 (02:04:54):
Stuff how much HAVE i spent on you in the
last eighteen? Months oh, yeah and probably close to five.
Grand my, Bad my bad.
Speaker 2 (02:05:00):
Excuse is that the addition.
Speaker 1 (02:05:05):
Excuse is that it's not THAT i don't want.
Speaker 3 (02:05:07):
It i'm just SAYING i didn't specifically ask the one
went out of your way to give.
Speaker 2 (02:05:11):
Me but the way you gotta look at it is
like he's looking out for your your. Future so that's my.
Future well, YEAH i, mean it's he's our our. Backup
when it doesn't depend we can't you, know be in
the fight. Anymore we got to rely on.
Speaker 1 (02:05:26):
THEM i, Mean and he's wearing the good, shirt you,
know the emotional support machine gun shirt, today And i've
got THE i doubt, alcoholic but it's worth a. SHOT
i got the unit shirt. On YE i gotta get
Because i've there's new. Ones there is the old. One,
(02:05:48):
yeah Well i've got the old old. One, okay, yeah you,
know but, yeah We've i've got to get. Some they're
we're working on.
Speaker 3 (02:05:57):
Them i'm surprised if on two of the two different
variations of like the h that everything is fine.
Speaker 1 (02:06:02):
Shirt, yeah it's. TRUE i mean things are getting kind
of you.
Speaker 2 (02:06:07):
Know do you see a new one For? Thanksgiving which
ONE i think that Says i'm one hundred percent thankful
for what i have Or i'm thankful WHAT i have
But i'm one hundred percent not liberal or something like. That,
YEAH i was, LIKE i gotta get that. Shirt it's pretty.
Speaker 1 (02:06:28):
Cool see what else? Here last thing? HERE us Monitoring
russian ship operating in international waters Near. Hawaii the military
said that On october twenty, ninth it directed A Russian
it detected A russian vessel approximately fifteen miles south of
(02:06:49):
Of hawaii In, hawaii and it was one of their
spy ships that's you, know set to to you, know
intercept phone communication all that kind of. Stuff and, yeah
so there's THAT i, mean you, know they're out there
all the. Time but in closing, folks some people ask
(02:07:14):
why we do, this why we do The Bondsie prepping,
podcast you, know because you, know we're not making money
off of it at. All we could. Be we could
be getting, sponsors But i've chosen not. To it's more
fun this. Way it's more fun not having to BECAUSE
(02:07:35):
i did the whole corporate radio, thing having to deal
with the station manager and AND fcc and and sponsors
and not embarrassing. Them and you, know but IF i
can make one person truly laugh and learn something every,
day then my job is. Done all joking. ASIDE i
(02:07:56):
Believe i'm called By god to do WHAT i do
to help people, prepare to make people, laugh to find
some humor in the strife and hardships that we all
face every day here on. Earth and it's my way
of trying to make the world a better place and
teach people to make it through what is. COMING i
hope the shows that we do can bring you at
least a little laughter and enjoy as we try to
balance news and prepping with. Fun and you were in
(02:08:18):
a little stupidity here and, there you, know sometimes a
little more than, others depending on how many drinks we
have at the, time you, know. Blitz. Yeah. Yeah so
with that all, said are you looking forward to shooting this? Weekend,
yeah he's, like, yeah of, course and we get to
(02:08:41):
See skittles. Shoot the last time she was, shooting it
was the fifteen twenty two at like fifty. Yards she's not, Bad,
yeah she just needs you, know more instruction and. Training.
Yeah most girls are better shots than. Guys. Anyways, yeah
it's a wagos. Bath he starts doing doing better than,
(02:09:01):
ME i might have to just hang it. Up, no,
no don't hang o.
Speaker 2 (02:09:05):
Ever don't ever.
Speaker 1 (02:09:06):
Quit we're not. Quitters, yeah BUT i can almost scare teach.
You she. Will you, know.
Speaker 2 (02:09:13):
My daughter does better than.
Speaker 1 (02:09:14):
Me my, daughter and once she gets used to the
fifteen twenty two, again you, know after like a like, Magnatude,
Yeah i'm gonna have her shoot your six five because the,
uh the recoil on the six five is not, bad
especially it's like when you're. Prone, yeah you, know so
(02:09:36):
she should she should like be able to handle, that
like no. Problem the first time he fired something big
because he was doing the fifteen twenty, two and then
the ar the first time he shot ak you, know oh,
yeah he was, like.
Speaker 3 (02:09:53):
WHOA i think the first THING i shot that had
like a lot a lot of recoil was the.
Speaker 1 (02:09:56):
Judge, yeah oh it. WAS i was like, seven, yeah,
yeah he was like seven or eight years old and
a friend of mine we were out shooting at the
big range and uh he was shooting the fifteen twenty
two like, mainly and then, uh my Friend ed pulled
(02:10:18):
out his, judge you, know And twitch goes over to
him as a nine year old eight year old life
what you? Were you? Were you were? Young tugs on his.
Sleeve CAN i try that? One and looks at. Me
i'm like showing my. Shoulders, hey you, know so you,
know And ed was an instructor too, anyway so got behind,
(02:10:39):
him held his, hands you, know so so you, know
like talked him through, it and then boom the look
on his. Face, man he was just like, wow.
Speaker 4 (02:10:50):
Priceless if it was the friend folding that, probably oh,
no it would have flown right out of your, hand my, skull,
yeah it would have just it would have smacked your
face and urgent.
Speaker 1 (02:11:02):
Care, well thank you folks for tuning in and sharing
this time with, us don't forget to check out and
join our prepping group On facebook Saying Cloud prepping And.
Surviving of course our podcast page On facebook as well
THE Bondsi Prepping. Podcast both those places you'll see the
vast majority of the articles and the and the stories
(02:11:23):
and the YouTube videos that we talk about. Here so
if you want to dig in deeper and not just
the headline like portion of, it check it out. There
and of course if you have your, questions post them
in there because we will answer and we'll talk about
it on the, show and you'll get not just our,
opinions but a lot of the other people that are
(02:11:44):
in the prepping. Group and, yeah there's about a thousand
people that'll sit there and they'll pop. In they'll give
you their, ideas whether they're good or. Not you can
email us anytime bondsimfordio dot. Com that's B. A. N
Z ai at mfordio dot com with the question in
your comments and your ideas in. Closing, please my brothers
and my, sisters, remember stay, safe stay, strapped and never
(02:12:09):
ever panic ponds out play