This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. This is the Voice of Freedom. The Hour of the Time is also carried on WRMI. Worldwide, shortwave radio, 9955 kilohertz, Monday through Friday nights, 5 until 7 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. This is my daddy's station. I'm Pooh. Classic radio like you always wished it could be. 101.1 FM. Eager. 101.1 FM is owned and operated by the Independence Foundation Trust as a nonprofit community service. 101.1 FM. 1.1 FM. 2.1 FM. 1.1 FM. 2.1 FM. 2.1 FM. 2.1 FM. 3.2 FM. мен din to the tower of the gates of an incredible beauty of the pitch merry season's подобиеth. You're listening to the Hour of the Time, and I'm Michelle. Before we begin today's program, I would like to remind the listening audience that the Hour of the Time is brought to you by Swiss America Trading, specialists in precious metals, non-confiscatable and non-reportable hard assets. If you have not yet made that call to Swiss America to ask them how they can help you preserve your assets against the future impending economic collapse, don't hesitate any longer, my friends, to call them. Swiss America has stood by the Hour of the Time through thick and thin for many, many years. They deserve your sponsorship, and they can help you. Call them and speak with one of their experts. Tell them you're a listener to the Hour of the Time, and they'll put you in touch with a representative of their company who works with Hour of the Time listeners, and they'll give you red carpet treatment every single time. Call today. Swiss America Trading. 1-800-289-2646. That's 1-800-289-2646. Swiss America Trading. The heads are up, the chests are out, the arms are swinging and cadence counts. Down the 1-2, down the 3-4, cadence counts. 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4. I had a good home when I left, you're right. You had a good home when you left, you're right. Jody was there when I left, you're right. And Jody was there when you left, you're right. Sound off. 1-2-3-4. 3-4. 10 counts. 1-2-3-4. 1-2-3-4. Eeny, meeny, miny, more. Let's go back and count some more. Sound off. 1-2-3-4. 3-4. 10 counts. 1-2-3-4. 1-2-3-4. Ladies and gentlemen, tonight's program is a salute to the patriotic music of America. That brief selection you just heard is from a very rare album. It was released in the 1950s by Child Craft Encyclopedia, and it's called Patriotic Songs and Marches for Children. I recently encountered a public school where the children no longer recite the Pledge of Allegiance at all. Twice a week, the principal reads the Pledge of Allegiance over the intercom into the classrooms, but the children are not encouraged to stand by the side of their desks, place their hand over their heart, and pledge the flag. This simply is not done. And I thought it would be appropriate, given the state of the nation today, to collect some of this wonderful patriotic American music and some of the stories about it in an episode of the Hour of the Time, if for no other reason than to make it available to our children later on, so they can remember these things and appreciate our great musical heritage, which celebrates our freedom. I'd like to open this evening's program with a rousing rendition of Yankee Doodle. The irony of Yankee Doodle, the first great American popular song, and still a popular favorite, is that it may have been conceived as a mockery of the American colonial soldiers. One of the most common legends about the tune attributes its authorship to a surgeon attached to the British Army at Albany during the French and Indian Wars, who was so bemused by the ragamuffin appearance of the colonial troops attached to his regiment that he composed this mocking little ditty sometime in the 1750s. It soon became a popular British taunt, and even the colonials took to singing it, not realizing that the joke was on them. Supposedly, when Colonel Hugh Percy's troops marched out of Boston in April 1775, on their way to Lexington and Concord, they kept step to the strains of Yankee Doodle. But the colonials had the last laugh. As the British beat a hasty retreat, the victorious Americans followed, singing a gleeful rendition of the tune. This arrangement is performed by the Boston Pops Orchestra. This arrangement is produced by the Boston Pops Orchestra. It is alsoared by the ziet in the next part of theashi temple, and the Catholic military pride. New čas aquísp eerieリ some of the randj paraphrasmus by the Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. And have my love Stand beside her and guide her Through the night with a light from above From the mountain to the prairie Through the autumn white before God bless America My home sweet home And now that you'll wear me Through the autumn white before God bless America My home sweet home God bless America My home sweet home My home sweet home As the Austrian composer Johann Strauss, Jr. is called the Waltz King, so, and for equal reason, is America's own John Philip Sousa known as the March King. And if any one march offers explanation for that title, it must surely be his masterpiece, The Stars and Stripes Forever. Sousa composed it while returning by ship from Europe, swept up in a surge of patriotic nostalgia, and guided, he said, by divine inspiration. The three themes of the final trio were meant to typify the three sections of the United States. The broad melody, or main theme, represents the North. The famous piccolo obbligato is the South, and the bold counter-melody of the trombones recalls the West. Sousa penned the piece on Christmas Day, 1896, presumably in his hotel suite in New York, after the boat had docked. . Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. For all of its salty flavor and the images it conjures up of an American battle fleet slicing through surging waves, Another midshipman, Royal Lovell, wrote additional words for it. This is Anchors Away for the U.S. Navy. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. For a number of years, John Philip Sousa was widely thought to have composed The Kaysons Go Rolling Along, a tribute to the artillerymen who hit the dusty trail as the Kaysons Go Rolling Along. The attribution was due to the publication in 1918 of the U.S. Field Artillery March, listing the March King as composer. Actually, Sousa's version was only an arrangement of a march that had been composed 11 years earlier by Edmund L. Gruber, a career Army officer, for a reunion in the Philippine Islands of two long-separated units of the 5th Field Artillery Regiment. A post-World War II adaptation turned Gruber's tune into The Army Goes Rolling Along, which was subsequently designated the official song of the United States Army. Unwell, the Chief Diet, the local library of Santa Claus. The griff once played along on Friday, August 19th, Them L think it were maybe no longer search for an honor. A chance of hosting is less confirmed than a suddenry, taxes to very much liquor in מדesc перекzes, where they carry out as a 폭an counterpart for a eventualи victor of 19th, city ofissionais, in relegation and consider a defeat for a finalement path andité . A duty of being attended the local exploring of the National Park troupe, Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Oh, yeah. Easily the most recent of the classic United States military songs is one that was known to every child growing up in America during World War II as Off We Go Into the Wild Blue Yonder. It was written in 1939 by Robert M. Crawford, a member of the music faculty at Princeton, for a contest sponsored by Liberty Magazine to find a song for the newly formed Army Air Corps and was known at that time as the Army Air Corps Song. In accordance with the changes the years have brought, the song and the Corps are now known as the U.S. Air Force. Off We Go Into the Wild Blue Yonder, non- leisurely end of the Right compounds to occur. olarak inaron is theention and the kwz We go Into the Wild Blue Yonder because the U.S. Air Force is blue. Thank you. We'll be right back. The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End downward and and Oh, Mary, another one. Come to God yet will drink up. I drop mypis from the highest función allow. On the morning of September 13, 1814, during the War of 1812, Francis Scott Key boarded a British warship in Chesapeake Bay under a flag of truce. His mission was to secure the release of a civilian taken prisoner during the British evacuation of Washington, D.C. But once aboard, he was unable to leave because the fleet had begun its attack on Fort McHenry. When the smoke had cleared the following morning, Key looked at the fort to discover that it had not surrendered. He began scribbling a poem and completed it by the time he got to shore. Sung to an English drinking song to Anna Creon in heaven, his poem became popular immediately, although the Star Spangled Banner didn't become our national anthem until more than a century later in 1931. Your homework assignment is to find a book of English literature and locate the third stanza of the Star Spangled Banner, written by Francis Scott Key, for we only sing three stanzas of his poem in our national anthem, and he wrote four. This is our national anthem, the Star Spangled Banner. The Star Spangled Banner. The Star Spangled Banner. The Star Spangled Banner. The Star Sp Rogers. The Star Spangled Banner. The Star Spangled Banner. In men's silence re-roses What is that which the great Over the warings see? Has it filled for heroes That when teals hath disordered Thou is cursed of me Of the Lord he first came And the glory reached And the kind of the free Jesus Christ, I am the father And the world of his way For the night of the free And the world of the past way For the night of the free Dun! Dun! Dun!che Woone Ere rouge Fel музы Y And the Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. That's at 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. 8 central, 7 mountain, and 6 Pacific Standard Time. Thank you, thank you. Thank you. Good evening. You're listening to the Hour of the Time, and I'm your temporary hostette, Michelle. For those of you who are regular listeners to this program, you know that many hours have been devoted to discussing economic collapse, its likelihood, probability, its inevitability. Tonight, we're going to talk about an extremely controversial material that will involve what you must do to prepare to survive after the economic collapse. As in other programs that I've done regarding training, this material is approximately 20 years old, so you must listen to it and take very good notes and listen for broad principles that are applicable to a variety of circumstances and conditions. So you'll have approximately three minutes here to get paper and pencil by your side. You're going to need it. And then we'll continue with this evening's program, Defending Your Retreat, a manual after the collapse. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I'm out of my way. I'm out of my way. I'm out of my way. I'm out of my way. I'm out of my way. I'm out of my way. I know I need a little bit. I'm getting so used to it now. If I'm around and around, if I get on, I don't want to stop. And they don't fight. And they don't get going. And they don't get a sound. Now it's like how easy it works. We'll build someவ and winter someone. I already don't have I? I know they don't got. And the magic of beautiful steel phones. And the magic of �. And the magic of b Piet. And the Toyota��X Philippies. And the favorite parts won the war. And the The life is ready to go. One of the days I'm alive, one of the night's minds. I like that, I don't get home. There ain't no money, there's no people. There ain't no way to run. There ain't no more money, but you're me too. I ain't got to pull it down. I ain't got to pull it down. There ain't no more money, I'm not too. There ain't no more money, I ain't got to pay. There ain't no more money, I ain't got to pay. There ain't no greater than no more money. I ain't got to pay for that. See you next week! You have made love, while I'm so young, I'm aend beautiful face. I'll show all my hands, now, I'm all I'm about. Do you have a shadow that you are wrong with the other? Can you scare me if I don't want it? I want you to smile? This ain't no party. This ain't no disco. This ain't no fooling around. This is Descending Your Retreat. Roman numeral 1. Introduction. What you are about to hear may seem shocking. Our country is currently headed on a course that may completely change life in America as we know it. Very soon, our basic survival may depend on our ability to defend our possessions, families, and homes. There are many that feel the impending economic collapse will be accompanied by a neat, lawful, and calm period of economic adjustment. If they are correct, then the need for information such as this does not exist. However, they are playing poker with the biggest stakes of all, their lives. I would far rather be too well prepared than face the future defenseless. The events of 1977 in New York City during the power shortage are an omen of what we can expect during a period of extended economic crisis. How would you defend your possessions against organized bands of looters? Could you survive without police protection? It is neither the purpose nor intention here to explain or detail the economic disaster that awaits us. I assume that if you were not concerned with the frightening prospects of our future, you would not be listening to this program. If this information sounds militaristic, it is intended to be so. Even the greatest preparations for the future will be to no avail if you are not able to defend and protect what you have saved. The background of the writer of this manual includes graduating from one of our country's military academies and combat experience in Vietnam. Many of the comments and suggestions that you will hear are drawn from both his military training and observations. Some of the material here has been taken from an impeccable source, U.S. military training manuals. The writer has, however, attempted to separate the vital and necessary information from that which has no relevance. If you will study and put into effect many of the ideas contained here, you will greatly increase your chances for survival. Roman numeral II Does this all sound extreme? I can imagine some prospective retreater hearing these words and wondering how paranoid I must be. Let me answer the question to save you the time worrying. Your time will be much better spent preparing for the coming collapse. It is my personal conviction that we should prepare for the worst and feel very fortunate if it does not occur. Is it imprudent to have a fire extinguisher in your home, even though the possibility of a home fire is actually very remote? Unfortunately, the days ahead of us may be very severe. For every one family that prepares for the coming calamity, perhaps a thousand or more will not. When these unprepared individuals begin to run out of food, is there any limit to their struggle for survival? Your survival will depend on your ability to protect what you have. The large number of state and federal armories scattered around the country may at first seem a blessing. In the long run, however, they may constitute the ultimate threat to our existence at the retreat. When controlled and supervised, the weapons in these armories increase our country's strength and prevent widespread civil disorder, sometimes. In the advanced stages of the inflationary panic that seems to be coming, the government, both state and federal, will most likely lose control over the National Guard and many federal troops. As the dollar loses more value each day, troops will eventually refuse to serve when paid only with worthless paper money. As civil disorder begins, the troops must decide whether to defend their homes and families or yours. Guess what they will decide? As a byproduct, they will take home with them, or allow to fall into the wrong hands, vast quantities of automatic weapons, ammunition, grenades, mortars, and even armored vehicles. How ridiculous would your defensive preparations seem against heavily armored looters assaulting your position for food? What is the answer? As I see it, we must make every possible preparation for defense consistent with our abilities and finances. Given the prospect of attacking a well-prepared defense position, your attackers may soon give up this folly and move down the road to attack someone else. Roman numeral 3 Defending your retreat The single most important criteria of all is to ensure the retreat you select is defendable. Your defense may simply be its isolation, its physical preparations such as barbed wire or entrenchments, or a combination of the two. Remember, however, even the most thoroughly prepared and vigorously defended retreat may not survive repeated assaults from heavily armed and determined bands of looters in a highly populated area. Conversely, the most isolated retreat may fall to a single looter unless basic security precautions are taken. Basically, stay as far away from the population centers as possible. As food begins to disappear from the supermarket shelves, roaming bands of thugs and looters will gradually begin the attrition process. The weak and unprepared in the major urban areas will be the first victims of the collapse. The more agrarian and remote cities and towns will be spared the violence initially. However, our interstate highway system and modern communication systems will soon spread the disorder over most of the country. It is assumed that your retreat is somewhat isolated or at least away from the major urban areas. Not all of the suggestions here are appropriate for every application. You should, however, find enough to greatly improve the defenses of your selected site. Roman numeral 4. Never retreat alone. To a certain extent, there is safety to be found in numbers. A well-defended retreat of several families is less likely to be attacked than that of a single family. Only if you have the protection of total isolation, deep in the north woods or the Arizona desert, etc., should a single family retreat be considered. One person can only remain on guard duty so long. Even a well-armed single family would be overwhelmed in a short time by the coordinated attack of only lightly armed looters. Multiple family retreats offer the following advantages. One, cooperation in instituting a coordinated and well-prepared defensive system that would not be possible for the single family. Two, sharing of the tasks of defense, hunting, food preparation, housekeeping, farming, etc. And three, the potential of attracting qualified medical personnel to the established retreat. And this is most important. Roman numeral 5. What about your neighbors? In some respects, the best neighbors to have at your retreat are none. The fewer people that are in an area, the less reason an armed group of looters would want to go there. Looters and other parasitic creatures will prey on those that have neither the knowledge, weapons, or will to defend themselves. If the area of your retreat contains large numbers of unprepared people, it will attract looters just like bees to honey. An area of fiercely independent people that are willing to protect what they have saved may be an ideal neighborhood. Two or more retreats in close proximity linked by CB radios may be able to offer mutual support in case of attack by a numerically superior force. It may be worth consideration. Roman numeral 6. Roman numeral 6. Types of attacks. Mr. Mel Tappan, in his excellent book, Survival Guns, published in 1976, lists the four most common types of attacks to expect. 1. Exposed attack. This will probably be the most common type of attack. Looters and other rabble simply rush your position with little coordinated or accurate firing. If you have chosen and prepared your defensive position well, and if you are suitably armed, you should expect to defeat a force ten or more times your strength. Your sentries or scouts should give ample warning of the impending attack. 2. The stealth blitz. One of the most dangerous forms of attack to the defenders. The attacking force, which may be quite small, uses the cover of darkness to sneak up and overpower your sentries. Simultaneous entry may be made at several different points. This type of attack may be successfully defended against by alert sentries and adequate warning systems. 3. Fire blitz. This is probably the most dangerous form of attack to the defenders. The only viable response is frequently to escape your dwelling via a hidden and hopefully secure means. This type of attack occurs when a usually superior force surrounds your retreat and simultaneously firebombs it and hoses it with automatic weapons fire. The only possible defense is to have a clear field of fire in all directions to prevent the enemy approaching your position and or remote-controlled anti-personnel explosive charges that may be detonated from inside the retreat. 4. Scouting attack. A small, advanced party is set ahead of the main body of attackers to test the strength of the defenders. By exposing themselves to your fire, they will attempt to determine the range and depth of your defensive fire. If your defenses are reasonably strong, a viable response may be to respond only with deliberately ineffective fire, such as shotguns, pistols, .22 caliber rimfire, etc. in an attempt to lure the main body into a frontal assault. Roman numeral 7. Roman numeral 7. Roman numeral 7. Roman numeral 7. Roman numeral 7. Chain of command. Roman numeral 7. The person in your retreat with the most military experience should be put in complete charge of all activities pertaining to the defense of your compound. From a central observation or command bunker, he should direct via radio if possible, and coordinate all offensive and defensive combat operations. Roman numeral 8. Roman numeral 8. Guards are a must. One of the greatest dangers to your retreat is the surprise attack. In the smaller one or two family retreats, it becomes impossible to keep a guard on duty constantly. This inherent problem is one reason that multiple family retreats are safer. The greatest danger from surprise attack comes at night. The absence of an alert guard may make your retreat vulnerable to even a lone attacker. Smaller retreats must rely heavily upon protective barbed wire, guard dogs, and even geese to give warning of an attack. Larger retreats should assign approximately twice the guard force at night as during the day. During daylight hours, your guard force may be kept to a minimum. With darkness, however, the danger of attack increases substantially. In Vietnam, the greatest danger of attack came during the evening hours. The fortified outposts that the Marines and special forces established in the Vietnamese villages are an excellent study model. The problems they faced are similar to what we may expect to confront at a retreat. In preparing the defensive positions at your retreat, the following priorities should be established. 1. Clear fields of fire and remove objects that limit observation. 2. Prepare adequate communication and observation systems, visuals, CD radios, walkie-talkies, and so forth. 3. Prepare individual shelters, storage facilities, and weapon emplacements. 4. Design and install barbed wire obstacles and barricades. 5. Plan for the concealment or camouflage of all defensive positions. Roman numeral 9. To shoot or not to shoot. As you watch a group of strangers approach your retreat, an important decision must be made. 6. Militarily, you do not want to allow any strangers to approach and enter your retreat. 7. To do so would compromise and weaken the effectiveness of your defense. 8. As the group approaches, you should have established a deadline, beyond which no one may approach without securing permission. 9. Anyone that is so warned and refuses to heed your warning must be treated as an enemy. 9. Roman numeral 10. Communication. Communication is a vital ingredient in coordinating the defense of your retreat. The advent and development of the CB radio has been of major interest to the retreater. Low-cost, portable CB radios may be used to arm all patriots, lookouts, scouts, and so forth with instant communications. CBs are not private, however. A potential enemy may just as easily monitor all your messages once they discover the channel you are using. Remember, never discuss codes, ciphers, or the organization of your frequency changes over the CB radio. One security solution may be to see if crystals may be secured for all of your CB sets that allow them to operate either slightly above or below the regular frequencies. However, the FCC takes a very dim view of this idea. Try to lay in an adequate supply of batteries and standardize all CB units to use the same batteries. Roman numeral 11. Need for defensive lighting. As previously discussed, the hours from sunset to sunrise are the most dangerous time for the retreat. It is during this time that an enemy would most likely launch an attack. Darkness certainly favors the attacker. Some types of defensive lighting to locate the attackers is necessary. Floodlights or high-powered searchlights may at first seem to be the answer. They do, however, have certain limiting features that prevent them from being of use in most situations. These are, 1. They require a large power source that most likely will not be available in a survival situation. 2. Floodlights or high-powered searchlights would easily be shot out by an enemy determined to attack your position. There are two solutions to the problem. They are, 1. Flares. The Army and Marines in Vietnam faced the same problem. The mortar-launched parachute flare proved to be an excellent solution. The extremely bright magnesium flares would light a very large area for a surprisingly long time. The hotly burning magnesium flare products produce updrafts that help the parachutes stay aloft longer. The problem, of course, comes in when you try to obtain mortars and parachute flares. Though difficult and perhaps illegal to obtain now, there may be a time that they are available in the future. Keep them on your list. 2. Night vision devices. There are basically two types of night vision devices available, active and passive. A. Active. A light is emitted, such as infrared, and then viewed through a special viewer. The M1 infrared sniping system of the Korean War fame used this method. The major drawbacks are the bulky power packs required to operate the unit and the possibility that an enemy with an infrared viewer could easily locate your position from your light transmissions. B. Passive. A passive night vision system is most desirable because it emits no light. The passive device amplifies existing light levels, such as moonlight and starlight, several million times. During the Vietnam conflict, the writer of this manual used a night vision scope on many occasions to locate enemy sappers before they could approach the lines. A night vision scope mounted on a rifle, such as the M16, creates a potent weapon that seriously discourages an enemy from launching a night attack. A. Roman numeral 12. The use of binoculars and spotting scopes. Binoculars are a valuable tool for both offensive and defensive operations. Binoculars and spotting scopes allow you to identify potential targets at long distances before they become a threat to your retreat. They can also be used to identify friendly aliens to prevent accidents. All guards should have and utilize binoculars or high-powered spotting scopes. All patrols or hunting parties should utilize binoculars to search terrain for both game as well as enemy movement. Roman numeral 13. Sandbags. Sandbags are the basis for any and all defensive emplacements at your retreat. A properly protected position may be invulnerable to all types of small arms fire and most types of mortar fire. They owe their effectiveness to the fact that they absorb and cushion the incoming shot and shell without flying apart. Where wood splinters and concrete eventually cracks after a nut hits, sandbags just continue to absorb the shock. Sandbags are, of course, no great secret. We have been using them for many years and through several wars. About the only improvement we have been able to make is producing the bags out of a synthetic material to prevent the eventual rot that occurred with canvas sandbags. When you have a choice, always choose the synthetic bags. Sandbags are not expensive and will last in storage, the synthetic ones anyway, indefinitely. They are released in large numbers on the surplus market and are relatively easy to locate. Do not be afraid to purchase large numbers of bags. A well-fortified retreat may utilize hundreds or even thousands of sandbags. As an added bonus, the filling of sandbags constitutes an excellent form of physical exercise. In Vietnam, it was common to spend at least one hour daily filling sandbags and frequently much longer when new emplacements were being constructed. Roman numeral 14 How good is your wire? Many good books with illustrations will give you explicit details on the proper procedure to establish a barbed wire perimeter at your defensive position. I encourage you to find those books and study them carefully. A word of caution, however, remember that even good barbed wire emplacements do not make your retreat impregnable. Your wire should never be used as an excuse to relax your alertness. The writer of this manual saw a Vietnamese Kit Carson Scout, a former VC that crossed over, take only two minutes to cross a 60-foot barbed wire perimeter that had been considered impenetrable. While the number of Kit Carson Scouts you may engage after the collapse are admittedly few, do take heed. Don't be lulled into a false sense of security. Roman numeral 15 Land Mines The proper use of land or anti-personnel mines will reduce the area of your perimeter that must be defended against land assault. They do, however, have several serious drawbacks. Landmines are very hard to obtain. Landmines are very hard to obtain. Landmines are very hard to obtain. The possession of landmines before an economic collapse would be a serious violation of federal law. A serious violation of federal law. Landmines and similar anti-personnel devices at this time are most definitely illegal, so educate yourself completely on this subject, including every aspect of the law. Roman numeral 16 Camouflage your strength Whenever possible, keep the enemy wondering about the strength of your fortifications. Make it a firm rule not to allow strangers to enter your defensive compound. A potential enemy that is allowed to wander inside your wire may expose and later exploit a weakness in your defensive planning. This was a great problem in Vietnam. Almost every U.S. military security compound had a varying number of Vietnamese cooks, laundry girls, laborers, and so forth that were used for odd jobs around the camps. These same so-called peasants mapped out and reported entire defensive strongpoints and their weaknesses. Much of the success of the Viet Cong came from attacking isolated outposts and was due to a thorough knowledge of the perimeter before the attack. Use camouflage to conceal your defensive positions. Construct your fortifications so that a cursory examination of your perimeter with binoculars will not reveal all your positions. And I'll I'll I'll I'll für you değil. Truth'sė of rape. Darn I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I will you. Darn I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I will I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll I will I'll Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. you regardless of the amount of money that you have to spend and regardless of your condition or circumstance. The number is 1-800-289-2646. That's 1-800-289-2646. Swiss America Trading. The number is 1-800-289-2646. The number is 1-800-289-2646. The number is 1-800-2944. Subscribe now ! Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. This is the Voice of Freedom. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Stay tuned later at 7 p.m. Mountain Standard Time, 9 Eastern, for the home satellite radio show with Dan Morgan. This is my daddy's station. I'm Pooh, classic radio like you always wished it could be. 101.1 FM, eager. 101.1 FM is owned and operated by the Independent Foundation Trust as a non-profit community service. We now return you to our regularly scheduled programming, all oldies, most of the time. 1, 2, 3 o'clock, 4 o'clock, rock. 5, 6, 7 o'clock, 8 o'clock, rock. 9, 10, 11 o'clock, 12 o'clock, rock. We're going to rock around 7 o'clock tonight. When you start right, so, it's going to be hot. I've become fun when the rocks light. 1, 2, 3 o'clock, around the clock tonight. 1, 2, 3 o'clock, rock. 2, 3 o'clock, day light. 1, 2, 3 o'clock, go around the clock tonight. 1, 2, 3 o'clock, 2, 3 o'clock. 2, 3 o'clock, go around the clock tonight.