The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Matter of Facts: Prepper Mythbusters
Episode Date: October 14, 2024http://www.mofpodcast.com/www.pbnfamily.comhttps://www.facebook.com/matteroffactspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/groups/mofpodcastgroup/https://rumble.com/user/Mofpodcastwww.youtube.com/user/philrabh...ttps://www.instagram.com/mofpodcasthttps://twitter.com/themofpodcastSupport the showMerch at: https://southerngalscrafts.myshopify.com/Shop at Amazon: http://amzn.to/2ora9riPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/mofpodcastPurchase American Insurgent by Phil Rabalais: https://amzn.to/2FvSLMLShop at MantisX: http://www.mantisx.com/ref?id=173*The views and opinions of guests do not reflect the opinions of Phil Rabalais, Andrew Bobo, or the Matter of Facts Podcast*Phil and Nic play Prepper Mythbusters this week, bringing a list of preparedness myths they've heard to debate, discuss, and maybe even put to bed permanently.Matter of Facts is now live-streaming our podcast on our YouTube channel, Facebook page, and Rumble. See the links above, join in the live chat, and see the faces behind the voices. Intro and Outro Music by Phil Rabalais All rights reserved, no commercial or non-commercial use without permission of creator prepper, prep, preparedness, prepared, emergency, survival, survive, self defense, 2nd amendment, 2a, gun rights, constitution, individual rights, train like you fight, firearms training, medical training, matter of facts podcast, mof podcast, reloading, handloading, ammo, ammunition, bullets, magazines, ar-15, ak-47, cz 75, cz, cz scorpion, bugout, bugout bag, get home bag, military, tacticalÂ
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Welcome back to the Matterfacts Podcast on the Prepper Broadcasting Network.
We talk prepping, guns, and politics every week on iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify.
Go check out our content at mofpodcast.com on Facebook or Instagram.
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I'm your host, Phil Ravele.
Andrew and Nick are on the other side of the mic, and here's your show. How about that? Proper intro music, got the
freaking audio file with Nick and Andrew named in it. It's almost like I'm a freaking professional
for the first time. You've been doing this a minute. Eight years, I still managed to make
this look like a complete
amateur operation. That's how you know you're doing
something right. Hey, you still work
for a living, so we gotta cut you some slack.
Yes, yes, yes. And as
I pointed out to several
other, you know, prospective
amateur podcasters over the years who were
always like, how do I get into podcasting?
The first thing I tell them is don't.
And then right after that, when they insist they want to, they say, how do I get into podcasting the first thing i tell them is don't and then right after
that when they insist they want to they say how do i make money at it i'm like start with a lot
more money and then you can you can make a small pile of money if you start with a big one how did
joe rogan make all of his podcast money by being famous yeah already i i'm gonna i'm gonna tell
you the ugly little truth of and this isn't just podcasting this is like content creation across
the board name recognition counts for
a whole heck of a lot, and eight
years ago, nobody but my mom and dad
knew who the hell Phil Radcliffe was.
So I had none of that,
and I just
got on the internet and started talking about
weird stuff that no one cared about,
and eight years later, there's actually a
small group of people that give a damn.
So, you know, here we are.
Right.
Working out pretty well so far.
It keeps me entertained if nothing else.
And I made some good friends along the way, but no money.
All this is funded by a day job.
There you go.
One of these days, maybe.
Who knows?
I hope not.
My dad told me a long time ago.
That sounds like a real pain.
maybe. Who knows? I hope not. My dad told me a long time ago. That sounds like a real pain. My dad told me a long time ago that if you
try to turn your passion into a job, you'll live to hate it.
And I've taken that to heart by working for people that
I can't stand on a good day and doing a job that drives me
absolutely nuts. But there's no chance that it will ever
be my passion. it's just a job
well that'll happen that's all right hey i i get to do what i like every day i like it so much i
brought work home but if i did what you did for a living i'd probably enjoy it too but you know
oh yeah i you definitely would a hundred percent If you like mechanic stuff at all, you'd love machining.
Most people that like mechanic stuff, if they get a touch of a bridge port
or a lathe, they get hooked.
Yeah, Raggle Fraggle just said, sounds like the gun industry. How do you become a millionaire?
Be a billionaire and start a gun shop, gun business. That sounds like
most things, to be perfectly honest.
Or nail a government contract first try.
Yeah, let me know how that's working out for everybody out there, because I mean, it's really easy if your uncle is a congressperson.
Otherwise, it's a little tricky.
There you go.
But the topic is not nepotism in government, even though that'd be a very funny one. It's Prepper Mythbusters, because I am hoping that over the course of the next 57 minutes, give or take, that Nick and I can put some of these myths to bed finally and forever, because dadgummit, some of these things aggravate the hell out of me.
Agreed. Some of these things aggravate the hell out of me. And the funny part of it is, is like, these are the myths I hear from people that are not in the preparedness community.
And it colors all of us in a weird light.
And these are even myths.
Some people that purport to be part of the preparedness community continue to chirp, which aggravates me even more.
Yeah.
So I guess let's start with the first one on the list, because I put mine in, Nick put
his in, we tried our best not to look at each other's, and then he scrambled them, so I
have no earthly idea what order they're coming up in.
First off, you skipped merch.
Oh.
I did skip merch.
I'm not even wearing the merch.
They will throw things at you next time they see you.
They probably will.
And that's okay.
But our merch is for sale at the Southern Gals Crafts.
The links are in the show description.
If you would like a fun cheeky shirt that my wife put a lot of time and effort into designing with some assistance from me and Andrew, they are available.
And there's koozies and there's cups and there's various things.
they are available and there's koozies and there's cups and there's various things.
We did our best with the merch to not make the podcast logo super duper prominent because I thought that the shirt should just kind of stand alone and be funny and be cheeky and then
have a little bit of mention to the psychopaths that dreamt it up. So it's not like you're going to be asked by 10,000 people,
what is this goofy podcast?
It'll be hopefully a, oh, that's hilarious,
or have you talked to a shrink lately?
That might come up.
But I'm not responsible for that.
I'm clicking on buttons and things are not working.
Raggle fraggle, don't beat me to the punchline.
He asked if,
uh,
Oh yeah,
I was just going to type a response that it's probably why your buttons
weren't working.
So you're saying I don't need a concrete reinforced steel bunker to be
considered a prepper.
Absolutely not.
So let's start with EMP nukes,
red Dawn and mad max.
I'm not going to say that a person who is preparing for any of these scenarios is not a prepper.
I'm going to say that there is so much more to preparedness than your favorite dystopian sci-fi movie.
Like, there are so many things that are so much more likely to happen to you.
There are so many more things to prepare for.
things that are so much more likely to happen to you there's so many more things to prepare for that if this is your entire concept of preparedness is like i'm getting ready for the literal end of
the world for like the day after judgment day from terminator i'm dating myself with the references
but oh sure but like if that's what you're preparing for cool beans just please stop
telling people that's all preparedness is because there's a lot of us who don't live in bunkers who don't have rooms full of ammo ammunition mres who are still vibrant members of the preparedness community
we just prep for i don't know i want to i don't want to say more realistic things tuesday but
well okay but let's let's look at the last let's look at the last two weeks. In the last two weeks, Florida got its teeth kicked in by a hurricane.
North Carolina, basically the whole Appalachians got their teeth kicked in by a hurricane.
There's a massive solar flare that either is coming to Earth or has already washed over the Earth.
Like, there's stuff that happens, like Nick said, on a Tuesday that we should probably be preparing for before we get ready for the Chinese or the Russians or whoever the latest boogaboo is to paratroop into our backyard or for all the gasoline to disappear and we'd have to deal with Lord Humongous in the front yard.
I mean, I'm not saying those aren't scenarios, but I don't think they're likely scenarios.
And I think if you tell people that's what you're preparing for, they're going to give you a little bit of a funny look.
As a thought experiment,
they are valid.
I will give them that as a thought experiment,
but you need to move past that thought experiment and take a broader look at
things.
For that matter,
you could say the same thing about zombies.
Oh yeah.
Zombies. Uncle Randy. Yeah. Perfect. And zombies are a great analogy. look at things for that matter you could say the same thing about zombies oh yeah zombies uncle
randy yeah perfect and zombies analogy but and uncle randy is very quick to point out we're not
getting ready for literal dawn of the you know dawn of the dead zombies zombie is the stand-in
for the thing you're preparing for sure so talk us through this, because this is not one of mine. All right. So people talk about, oh, we have to.
OK, we have to make sure otherwise Stuart will scream at us when we put a banner up on the screen for the audio only listeners.
We have to read it out loud. Otherwise, Stuart will become irrationally angry.
That's fair. That's very fair. So this one's mine.
will become irrationally angry. That's fair. That's very fair. So this one's mine. Becoming a prepper. People talk all the time about how do you get into preparedness? How do you become a
prepper? I don't think you become a prepper. You're not joining the Marine Corps. You're not
becoming an FBI agent. You're not learning to be a doctor. All you're doing is taking the basic
fundamental steps of adulting to the next
logical conclusion. All right. Your bills are going to come due next month. All right. You're
going to have to pay those. So why would you not try to have money set aside to pay those bills?
You're going to have to eat tomorrow. So why would you not set aside a little bit of extra food?
So why would you not set aside a little bit of extra food?
It's not so much of a new thing that you're doing.
You're just applying a structure to what you should already be doing.
Because you always need to eat.
You always need water.
You always need whatever tools to repair your house.
Tarps in case the tornado or a hurricane takes your roof off you're gonna have to have some of these things eventually so why not get them ahead of time when
they are cheap easy and available so that kind of echoes something i've been saying about preparedness
for a year even before you and i first met which is, we need to tear down this dividing line people put between their normal lives and preparedness and just make preparedness like the mindset
that extends the normal thing.
Like, you know, when I first got into preparedness eight years ago, a little more than that now,
I had prepper food and I had regular food.
And then I came around to this idea that like there's really no reason
why these the pantry and the other pantry shouldn't blend in and merge with each other
there's no reason that this pantry shouldn't feed this pantry and then I rotate my stuff through
like there's no reason to have there's a reason to have things segregated in the name of like
breaking case of emergency, like bare minimum.
We don't touch this for any normal kind of situation.
There's a valid argument to your seeds for next spring.
Or it like in my case,
when,
when I,
again,
when I first started ammunition,
I had X amount of ammunition that was segregated from the pile that was used
for training.
And it was breaking case of emergency.
These are my last, however many rounds of all these different cartridges.
And it was non-negotiable unless I am literally defending my home.
These cans don't get open.
That still exists, but I've grown that pile so much
that the breaking case of emergency ammunition will likely never be opened.
Good.
That's fine.
Ammunition doesn't expire.
I mean, I know firearms collectors that regularly shoot pinfire ammunition, and sometimes it's successful.
The old stuff.
And heck, I can't remember when the last time they made pinfire ammunition
was but it was before the 1900s so you can't tell me that your ammo is going to expire
well there's there's a large segment of the ak community that has existed prior to more modern
times when back before there were u.s manufacturers when every every ak in this country was either
yeah it was your soviet surplus or they were parts kits that were coming in the U.S.
and being reassembled on domestic, like, Nodak spuds and domestic receivers.
But the cheapest source of ammo was spam cans coming from overseas, and all that stuff got
boxed up in the 40s.
God.
And I can tell you...
I had some from lead-lined spam cans.
I never had a lead line spam can i had a i had a spam can and i popped it open foolishly because this was years ago and if i could go back and do
it again i would have opened up the not in a spam can ammunition first and kept the spam can in
reserve but i'm still sitting on like i don't know 17 1800
rounds of 760 by 39 which doesn't sound like a lot but at this point the ak is just kind of a
range toy to me like it's not a it's not something i would press in service to defend the family
unless i was in a really weird situation yeah but you know it's effective but no it just that just goes back to my point is like
everybody has a rainy day well everyone should have a rainy day fun rainy day fund everybody
should have enough food for the next couple of days in their house just because they're
going to have to eat and you can't get to the store every single day not here some italians can
but that's basically what it comes down to.
So right on the back of us talking about ammunition, can we all please agree with each other that the...
Do you get to read the title?
I am, but I'm trying to think of how I dodge Stuart inevitably throwing this back in my face.
You can't. It's too late.
How much ammo? I've seen it now. Lodge Stewart inevitably thrown this back in my face. You can't. It's too much.
I've seen it now.
So the thing of it is,
is that like,
I,
I wholeheartedly endorse people having more ammunition than most people would consider reasonable.
Like I wholeheartedly endorse that,
but it's not because I think every preparedness minded person needs like
10,000 rounds and a rack of ARs and all that stuff.
Like, I don't think you need that. I think you need several thousand rounds of ammo if you're
going to continue to train. And like every, every four years, we're about to have another one.
There's a major ammunition shortage in this country because everybody thinks this is the one where they're going to ban all the frigging guns.
And you cannot get ammunition for a reasonable price.
So I have always I've been a huge proponent for years now of have a big pile of ammunition, not because I think you need 10,000 rounds to shoot zombies with in the front yard, but because I don't want to have to buy ammo for the next two years
while I wait for all the crazy people to finally realize that, you know,
the Supreme Court exists, we still have a Second Amendment, so on and so forth.
We're probably not going to see ammunition banned today.
And then for the panic buying to die off and for the ammunition stocks to come back
and then for the quality control of the frigging ammunition plants to improve, because that's scary as hell to see.
Like anybody that's bought Winchester white box around an election time, you know what I'm talking about.
The QC goes to the floor.
The number of squibs per box goes up exponentially.
Yeah.
Raggle Fraggle just said, so the thing is,
you really do,
is primers and powder,
brass can be turned
and lead can be cast.
If you're here,
now here's the thing,
Raggle Fraggle,
I agree with you
because I reload my own ammo.
Comma, however, comma.
I've been saying for years
to people who are
in the preparedness community
who say,
oh, I want to get
into reload my own ammo.
I've been telling a lot of them,
don't. Don't, because at this point, like Oh, I want to get into reload mode ammo. I've been telling a lot of them. Don't don't because at this point,
like it's harder to get ahold of primers and powder and components for
anything outside of your most common rounds.
It's harder to get ahold of them than it is to get ahold of loaded
ammunition.
It can be.
Yeah.
The cost differential isn't there for those really common cartridges.
Now, if you're reloading something kind of esoteric or off the beaten path, and it doesn't have to be much, like.347 Magnum, I can reload it for less than half what it costs to buy it off the store shelf.
Oh, sure.
And I can load it infinitely hotter than what you're going to find on the store shelf, and I know for a fact it won't blow my gun in half.
So, like, there's an argument to be made for certain cartridges.
Reloading is a thing you do to support certain cartridges.
But if your whole battle plan is I'm going to invest in 9mm and 5.56,
you could save the cost of the reloading press and all the nonsense
and all the time you spend looking for powder and primers and components
and just go buy that amount of ammunition and be done with it.
So I just want to kind of dispel the myth that we all need 10,000 rounds.
You don't need 10,000 rounds for the apocalypse.
You need enough ammunition to defend your family, however much you think that is.
I don't think it's 10,000 rounds.
I do think you need enough ammunition to continue training for the next two years, let's say,
without having to buy
any more.
Because whatever that amount is, like if you go out and you pop two magazines a month,
then you need two magazines a month times 24 months.
If you burn down 500 rounds a month, you need a whole lot more ammo.
But I would just say you need like a two-year supply of ammunition for training.
Because when the prices go through the ceiling and when the availability goes to crap you still want to be able to train or you do what i did and
you buy a whole bunch of stuff from manis technology and you you know you do you turn
all of your range time and dry fire time to keep the skill set up which isn't a perfect trade-off
but it helps it's definitely better than not training it's definitely better than not training
at all but i agree you know there there is a bare minimum quantity of ammunition that i will keep
around the house per caliber now for me that's rather high because when i go to the range i'll
go for quite a while and i will shoot quite a lot um it's not nearly as much as it used to be when I was competing a little bit.
I wasn't good, but I was going to the competitions and I was training on every other week basis.
And you go through an awful lot of ammunition for that. three four five six hundred rounds in a class of five five six or nine mil or sometimes it was
500 of each or 400 of each on an eight hour class because you're doing a lot of pistol rifle work
for that that was arguably an insane quantity of ammunition to go through
but personally there i think there is a bare minimum number.
And I think it comes down to around for semi-automatic rifle or a
semi-automatic pistol,
a thousand rounds each in training ammunition.
And then whatever you're going to have for your home defense loads.
Yeah.
And I,
I think that's a reasonable number.
Some people will,
some people will argue what's reasonable,
but like you've seen the meme,
right.
Of like the garage garage that's like the
walls are lined in ammo cans i just i if you have the value of i was about to say the value of a
small car but depending on the carchers that wouldn't be that hard to do um if you have let's
say half the value of your house tied up in ammunition i think you need to prioritize
a little bit.
Especially if you have any kind of debt
or an unfunded retirement.
So Raggle brings up a good point that ties into this, Phil.
Kit or no kit?
Like, to have, to own?
Yeah.
Okay.
Do you think it is worthwhile to have, in your opinion?
100% with one caveat.
I recognize and encourage a person to think about kit in a multi-faceted way so like if your definition of having kit is having
a literal like crossbody bag that you just have magazine shoved into and that's enough kit for you
then cool if you want to do the chest rig or the
battle belt or the armor plates, no matter what degree you want to go into this with,
but I would only say this much. The people who have carried firearms for a freaking living,
being military, law enforcement, you could argue like, you know, personal security and so on and
so forth. They don't hold the magazine.
They don't put the magazines in their pockets and they don't carry them in their teeth.
So like understand that if you're going to carry a weapon, you need to have a way to carry extra ammunition.
It'd be in your best interest to have a way to carry things to plug holes if you're carrying stuff to make holes.
And all those things get much more difficult if you don't have some minimum level of kit.
And I've I've kind of run the full spectrum of like I built that bag that's sitting back there on the corner, which is, you know, like PCC magazines from a Scorpion.
It's a whole blowout kit.
It's actually got two mags for my daily carry gun, my daily carry handgun.
Like that is everything you'd put into a chest rig in a very nondescript looking package.
And it's kind of built to just wear cross body,
kind of like you would an old cartridge box from muzzleloader days.
And it works perfectly well.
It's something I can throw over my neck and I can jump out of a truck and I can go.
It works.
I also have chest rigs.
I also have an armor.
I also have an armor set up.
And each one of those things have their place. So I would just say that like having kit is not LARPing.
Having kit is in my mind,
a necessary extension of having a firearm.
Like you'll never see me run a rifle or shotgun without a sling.
Why not?
Because if you want to do anything with your hands, but hold the stupid thing, you need a sling. It's like having a handgun without a sling. Why not? Because if you want to do anything with your hands
but hold the stupid thing, you need a sling.
It's like having a handgun without a holster.
Every handgun in the house has a holster
because if you can't holster it, it's useless
to me. Agreed.
Some of that might come from a military
perspective, but
that was a lot of my indoctrination
into firearms.
Even taking out of account the military perspective of it.
I would say this.
Having kit is the next level after you've taken care of your basic needs.
It's the next step.
Just like what we call prepping is the next step of being a responsible adult, in my opinion.
If you have an EDC pistol.
Like myself and Phil.
Carry a pistol every day.
You're not waistbanding that thing.
Or you better not be.
Or I'm going to be pissed at you.
You better not be just shoving that thing in your pocket.
Without an appropriate holster.
Because number one.
That's a danger to yourself and others.
You're not being responsible.
Your femoral artery would appreciate it if you not do that
yeah and so would the cleanup crew but if you have say you've started investing in your retirement
you have yourself an emergency fund you have two weeks of food all right now you're looking at how
to defend your house in case something bad happens to you because that can happen in a non-prepping situation crackheads break into houses all the time and sometimes
people are home um you're probably not going to have time to throw that kid on during a home
invasion type scenario you're not you're going to be grabbing your whatever is your closest gun your nightstand gun whatever um you know it
agree with phil you gotta have somewhere to carry mags if you're gonna carry a rifle
you gotta have somewhere to carry spare shells if you're gonna like me rely on a shotgun i'm gonna
have to figure out some kind of way other than just the shells that are velcroed to the side
of my shotgun for home defense because that's still not very many rounds of 12 gauge i will offer
small cross-shoulder worn bag fill it full of the cards that are there have shotgun shells on them
so you can rip the card off your stock stab a new one on i i'm going to tell you that i i got a lot
of good natured ribbing about my man purse, but I've run drills with it.
Oh, yeah.
And I ran drills with the shotgun cards in my battle belt that I used to run with my AR before they made that thing no fun anymore.
Yeah.
I guess what I'm saying is like I've run drills with the thing and I know I can get magazines out of that carrier every bit as fast as I can out of an AR chest rig.
Oh, yeah.
It's just a different form factor.
Exactly.
You just have to train with it.
You just have to train with it.
And it's like anything else.
You know that the kit is only as important as the level of training you do with it.
Yep.
So explain this one to me.
I'll see Red Bro.
So this is the thing.
Is this the person who says they never
want to carry a gun because they'll just lose control themselves no this is this is the guy
that refuses to ever take any self-defense training refuses to take any training in particular i'll
see red bro is the guy that that uh you know your your buddy that you had in high school that thinks
he's a badass because he got into one fight in high school and he won.
This applies to everything.
People that think they're going to rise to the occasion
and be John McClane in Nakatomi Plaza.
That's not going to happen.
You never rise to the occasion.
You fall to the level that you have mastered your training.
And just like what we were talking about with you got to have your training ammo you got to train in your kit you have to
train in everything if you have equipment in your house that you have never used that you have never
taken the time to figure out how to use in a calm situation do you think you're going to be able to do it at three o'clock in the morning oh yeah of course yeah absolutely not totally
absolutely not i mean bill basic training they taught you how to fight i assume a little bit
okay so the army has decided that every single person that they bring into the military, they're going to train in hand-to-hand combat.
Yeah.
Clearly, there's a reason.
And one thing I'd love to point out at this juncture is that the crash course we got in hand-to-hand combat in the army was kind of laughable.
Sure.
But it was something.
The two and a half years I spent in martial arts as a teenager taught me infinitely more.
But you know the one thing I learned in all that that was the most important?
I learned what it feels like to get punched in the face.
Yep.
Which sounds funny, but anybody out there that's ever had any kind of martial training, boxing, martial arts, wrestling, wrestling anything like that you know what it feels
like to get punched in the face and that means that when the day comes you get punched in the
face again you're not going to sit there and stare you know stare at the person like you know i don't
even know what analogy to use but like the first thing the first time everything happens it's a
shock the first time anything happens it's a shock the first time
anything happens it's a shock first time you went to the gun range when you were a little kid i'm
sure that round popped off you jumped i don't remember i was probably like eight sure i was
let's see the first time i shot a gun 14 i remember it pretty distinctly. 12 gauge.
Yeah.
12 gauge slugs in the side by side.
My uncles were amused. Learn to swim in the deep end.
They were very amused.
But, you know,
it's the same for anything.
First time somebody gets hit in the face,
it's going to take them a second to process what happened.
Third time you get punched in the face, it's still going to take them a second to process what happened third time you get punched in the face it's still gonna take you a second to process what happened until you get used to
being in scenarios like that through martial arts training or say using your generator in the pitch
black when the wind is blowing it's gonna take you a few minutes. Ooh, yeah,
that's,
uh,
that's an experience.
Oh,
Jesse commented a seven mil,
uh,
scope in the eyes,
uh,
is a learning experience.
It very much is.
Uh,
I hope nobody takes away my,
my gun guy card.
I have never been scoped in the eyeball before.
Neither have I,
but I was always very diligent about setting up my scope so that it wouldn't happen.
Because I learned from other people's failure.
And at least the way I was taught to use a scope, like, you know how if you back away to just the right point, you'll see that tiny little bit of shadow all the way around?
That's where you should be.
Well, but that's how I was trained to use a scope.
So I'm always, my eye is always as far away as i
can get it and still have full visibility through the scope so like when i see somebody that chokes
upon and gets that gets that thing touching their eyebrow i'm just i just i don't go there because
it's not the way i was taught to shoot so i guess it means i was taught right but yeah taught right
and you were probably taught by people that knew how to set up a scope
for a person your size and shape i mean or i was taught by people who had been scoped and didn't
want to see me repeat their error that's that's possible too makes a horrible mess
so i'm gonna want i'm gonna once and for all dispel this rumor that the lone wolf prepper that is going to go at it in the apocalypse by himself is going to come out on top like a champ
because I'm a,
I will be the first to admit my wife and I are much better prepared than the
average person,
especially given this soft white underbelly of suburbia hell that we live in.
But the day after hurricane Ida,
we were up to our eyeballs and
problems we could not get out of it by ourselves we were like doing everything we could to try to
deal with two oak trees that fell in the front yard and one of them hit the front of the house
and we had more problems than we had things to fix problems what fixed the problem was some in-laws
of mine coming down from north louisiana with chainsaws and strong backs and we had that
yard cleared in two days an oak tree is a crew job two of them yeah well that's what i'm saying
like you said you cannot take care of problems that size alone in a reasonable time frame
you just can't there is a number of man hours required even with the right equipment. Four people takes a quarter of the time.
Yeah. And in that case, that was me, my brother-in-law and my 18-year-old nephew plus my wife and intermittently like my sister-in-law and my two nieces were also out there helping because they were I mean, all three of the kids were teenagers at that point.
And I mean, it it was it really did take a village dig us out of that problem.
So like I I my heart breaks for the person who's by themselves because like they don't have that community of preppers around them.
But I get irrationally aggravated at the ones who say they don't need or want that community because like i desperately want a rolodex full of people
i could call in my local area not that i don't love the friends i made through the podcast but
nick if i call you in illinois and say hey dude i got problems down here it's not going to do me a
ton of good immediately at the very least it's not going to do you any good for the next 12 to 24 hours.
Because that's how long it takes to get there.
Yeah.
Whereas if I have friends that live in the local community, I could have an army in my front yard in an hour.
12 to 24 minutes.
Yeah.
So like that's that's this whole idea of like the lone wolf prepper who can just do it all by himself, doesn't need a community, doesn't need a mag, doesn't need to be able to rely on his neighbors.
That aggravates me.
It does.
Mostly because.
I'm worried that someone is going to hear that and buy into it and think they also don't need the community that they can do this by themselves.
And then you have the blind leading. You have the stupid leading the blind yeah yeah it's it's like the old saying no man
is an island you know nobody can survive entirely on their own i mean there might be some people
that could in theory back in the day mountain man style live out there for a year but guess what
they did every year they came back
they bought supplies they traded with other people they still did need people for some small things
and that was at a time when there was arguably very few people in those areas and you know what
the death rate was among mountain men? Very high. Extremely high.
I think in the first year, better than three quarter of them would die.
But this was also in a time where like the skills necessary to do that were so much more commonplace and better understood than they are today.
I'm not so certain that they were that much more commonplace because still three quarters of them were dead in the first winter.
But three quarters, I would.
So I'm going to argue that three quarters of them were dead, not because of a lack of knowledge, but because the.
The bridge to jump over to survival was that long that even with all the knowledge and the skills that hill is still very steep to climb
that could be what i'm suggesting is that back then people built struck you know built shelters
with their hands much more commonly than they do now people naturally under people much more
commonly now knew how to harvest game they knew how to scratch you know they knew how to forage
out of the land and i'm not saying that that knowledge is totally gone, but I'm saying that if I go get 100 people from suburbia where I live, I will bet you an obscene amount of money all 100 of them do not know any of those things.
That's very possible.
I will bet you a very obscene amount of money 99 of them don't know.
very obscene amount of money 99 of them don't know but you know i would also say that even then back then depending on where you're pulling that population from do you think the residents of new
york city in the 1800s had that skill set probably not probably not but i don't think there were a
lot of new yorkers trying to go mountain manning out in the woods. But that's exactly it.
Even though the people that went were probably people that had all of the requisite skills, even with having all the requisite skills, still 75% of them were dead.
It's just that difficult.
You know, it's just that difficult.
But I hope the two is going to agree that like today, if you have a quote unquote prepper whose whole idea of preparedness is I have all these MRAs and all this ammo.
But I live in I live in the suburbs and I have air conditioning and, you know, I'm 40 pounds overweight.
My blood sugar is triple what it's supposed to be.
He is not going to go live out in the woods and forage for himself tomorrow.
And it's not happening.
Not a chance. I'm just going to take these out of order because we basically covered this already.
Go into live in the woods.
I'm going to tell you right here now that if I ever tell my wife that we're going to live in the woods
and use fistfuls of leaves for toilet paper, she is going to skin me for fun.
It will be wooden spoon and flip- weather at the Radbley household.
Like something bad is going to happen to me.
I'm just saying like that whole idea that like,
I totally get it.
I've known people in the preparedness community who are bushcraft experts,
who are primitive skills experts,
and they truly can go out into the woods with a puck knife and a lighter and like 20 bucks, and they'll be perfectly fine for a week.
I get it.
Those people exist.
But I'm going to tell you that your average preparedness person is not one of them.
Absolutely not.
Not even close.
And even then, those people, Bill or Phil, that can go out into the bushcraft and stuff like that. They can do it when they're well fed to start out with when they're leaving
in a week.
And while the game laws are being enforced.
Yes.
You want to know what happens?
The second the game wardens stop being a threat,
every hillbilly,
their brother and every bumpkin in the city
and their brother starts taking
shots at squirrels and rabbits with 22s,
starts hitting deer with their trucks
on purpose, starts spotlighting
rabbits and deer.
The game is going to be gone.
Well, I mean, look what happened
in Venezuela. They were breaking
into zoos to eat the zoo
animals and
eating people's pets that are left unsupervised i mean that's that's what happens when things break
down absolutely that's why i think when you when you make a plan when your plan hinges on i'm just
going to go out of the woods and figure out my life you remember that conversation you just got through having about i'll see red bro
same exact thing same exact thing applied in a slightly different direction figuring your life
out is gonna happen at full speed and full contact and it's not gonna end well no not at all roving
bands of the hungry yeah so you know how every once in a while you'll get you'll read one of these prepper novels and you'll have the the horde of starving townsfolk coming out of the
city to eat the country to eat all the food in the country because that's where the food comes from
you ever watch those the youtube shorts the instagram things the tiktok things whatever
you're on i try not to yeah well they pop up and every once in a while they get sent to me.
And one of them was they were interviewing people on the street
trying to figure out if they knew where the food in the grocery store came from.
Oh, Jesus Christ, I have seen this.
Yeah, pretty bad, right?
It was the moment that I completely lost all remaining faith in my fellow man.
All of it gone at once.
Oh, Jesus.
Thank you for this little trip down memory lane, Nick.
You're welcome.
I so wanted to be reminded of the fact that 90% of my countrymen are blithering idiots.
I don't know if it's that many, but here's the thing.
Look at starving people in places now.
Here's the thing.
Look at starving people in places now.
They don't have the energy to go wandering town to town, number one, because they're hungry.
They don't have necessarily the time because they're too busy trying to get food, get water, whatever they can where they are.
And most of them wouldn't know where to go to begin with you know you you may get some people previously um organized violent groups for instance i mean
look at what happened in serbia Bosnia, Croatia during those wars.
Any of the other civil wars, the Spanish Civil War. You will have gangs that come from wherever they are to wherever they think the resources are to come grab them.
But you're not going to have the 100,000 person town worth of people moving from one to another.
It's without a car.
First off,
they're all out of shape to begin with,
and now they're starving.
So they have even less energy.
I just,
I don't see that being a reality.
You,
you don't ever see it unless it's incentivized by a governmental organization
or an NGO.
And in case of Hungary,
it's more like economic refugees.
So what you're saying is once the, I'm such a jerk, but I'm going to say it anyway.
Once the tank division's battery runs out on their mobility scooter, that's it.
They're not coming to the country to try to eat your food.
God, no.
There's not a chance.
No, absolutely not. Especially if you're talking about, say, middle-aged office worker that's, hey, now, you know, seriously overweight.
Hey, man, I spend a lot of time in my office, too.
And I'm 34, I think, pretty sure.
And I definitely could use middle age some more weight too
but you know middle age middle age hurts though i'm not walking 100 miles in a week i'm not doing
it i mean i like going for hikes and all that we went for a very nice hike last weekend while we
were camping but a 10 mile hike with a backpack on that was that was rough i'm not going to do that unfed. I'm not doing that.
I mean, okay.
10 miles.
I was about to say I wouldn't do that for fun, but that does kind of sound like fun to me.
You would like the hike.
It's beautiful.
I'm a little twisted.
We have to catch up on some nonsense in the comments real fast.
Well, first of all, Mrs. Hembrickson agrees with me about the whole fistfuls of leaves
for toilet paper yeah that's a hard no flush that's our requirement that's a hard no um
i see big digs caught a live one so for those of you who are tuned in we decided to standardize
the show it's going to be on th Thursdays at 5 p.m. Central.
So I know a lot of people commented that you're not getting notifications.
And that's because somewhere along the way, we really pissed off like, you know, YouTube and meta and all the alphabets and all that.
Whatever.
So, you know, our notifications apparently don't work.
But 5 p.m. Central on Thursdays, that that should be fairly consistent.
It should.
Yeah, I don't see any
reason why it wouldn't be yeah ground no jesse ground beef does not come from a tree depends
if there were tornadoes and the cow hit the tree thank you for that nick you're welcome
we have to think about florida in a time like this
all right well since we just got through talking about roving bands of the hungry, same thing I said about going to live in the woods.
If your whole preparedness plan is I'm going to be a marauder and I'm going to take from people.
I came up with a really cool analogy for this, by the way, because you and I are both kind of nerds, so you'll appreciate this.
Let's say, hypothetically, if I want to give you the best possible chance of this little plan working out,
you are a level 20 fighter in D&D,
and you can critical on an 18 or a 19 or a 20.
Sure.
And let's say your unsuspecting quarry
is, say, an armor class of 5.
Nice low bar to clear, right?
Sure.
How many houses do you think you're going to hit before you
roll a one technically the odds are always one in 20 so and and you know how statistics works
the more times you don't roll a one the greater the chance that sooner or later your luck's going
to run out so this is always the thing i tell people when they're playing is like well i'm gonna
all i need is this much ammo and i'm going to go take all the rest of it.
I'm like, let me tell you something about being let me tell you something about disaster situations, which I've lived through a couple.
Every single fight I can avoid is a good fight to avoid because every single fight you get into, there's a there's a not zero chance you going to get shot or hurt or whatever.
So sooner or later, you keep rolling the dice, you're going to roll a one, and then it's going to be a really bad day for you.
And if your plan was to steal somebody's tourniquets, it's going to turn into a really bad and probably really short day after that.
So I'm just, please let me put this to bed.
Yeah. So I'm just, please let me put this to bed. And if you meet a person who claims to be in the preparedness community and they tell you with a straight face, not joking, but with a straight face that their whole plan is to take from their neighbors, I would love to know that person's home address. Because if he lives around me, I'm going to put him on a list. Look, here's the thing. Trained
military troops
seizing an objective, Phil,
that is actively defended.
What is the attacker to defender ratio
that you require?
Typically.
And an in-place defense with firearms.
Well, okay, so the circuitous
answer for this is as many as possible.
Because overwhelming force makes them.
Absolute bare minimum, you need two to one.
Two to one is considered the absolute bare minimum.
But you know what the average they usually try to aim for is?
At least three to one.
Yeah.
At least three to one against a prepared position.
Guess what?
We're not talking about high ground.
We're not talking about hardened defenses.
We're not talking about countermeasures, things like tank traps or trenches or whatever.
Infantry to infantry.
There's so many ways to make, and this is why typically.
Fights favor the defense.
In the military world, if you have your opponent on the run, the last freaking thing you ever do is stop advancing and let them dig in.
Because that's how World War I turned from a bad situation into a really bad situation, is because both sides dug in.
And once that happened,
neither side could get enough people on your side of the wall to break the
stalemate for freaking years.
So like,
so let's say you have a rock group.
So you've got five people together that you think you can trust to not stab
you in the back.
Okay.
Well,
let's go down that little fun road.
Yeah.
Cause if they're willing to kill everybody else to take their stuff, what's to stop them from doing the same to you?
But say you got five people.
Okay, great.
Average family size is like, what, four people, 4.25 people, something like that.
Fantastic.
You do not have even a two to one advantage against a standard size family.
Okay.
Let's talk just adults. Yes, you have a two to one advantage against a standard size family. Okay. Let's talk just adults.
Yes.
You have a two to one advantage against the first family.
What happens if the homeowner gets lucky the first time you've now lost your
two to one advantage?
What happens if the homeowner sees you coming?
Your two to one advantage now needs to be a three or four to one advantage in
order to have a hope of success.
And at that point you're expecting serious casualties.
Yeah.
So I get,
that's the thing I always try to point out to people is like,
if you,
if you dare the devil enough time sooner or later,
he's going to fill your dance card.
Oh,
absolutely.
Like there are people I know retired military people in the community that terrify me because
I know for certain if they decided to be aggressive, I am going to lose.
Flat out, I am going to lose.
One of my shooting instructors lives not very far away from me.
He's a retired Marine who was very good at what he did and is still very good at what he did.
I don't want that guy ever upset with me for any reason.
And you don't know that the house you're kicking into is not the angry, extremely well-trained and aware vet with night vision goggles.
Congratulations.
well trained and aware of that with night vision goggles congratulations and let's just say that after the global war on terror there's a uh there's there's a very not small group of people
here in the u.s who fit that bill these days who right because like there you know there was that
maybe it's jerry michalik well but let's call what it is from from about what's 1972.
When was the fall of Saigon?
72.
Yeah.
Don't don't look it up.
It's roundabout there.
So from like the early 1970s, really until about 19, the early 1990s, when we had Desert Storm, you had this huge span of time where even people that served in the military, if they weren't special forces or if they weren't on a handful of deployments, they really don't have combat experience.
Right.
And then after 2001, almost every single member of the active duty and a hell of a lot of
National Guardsmen, by the way, because I was Louisiana National Guard, not that they
asked me when they gave me moat orders, But like a lot of the military wound up with real legitimate combat experience in Afghanistan
and Iraq.
And now most of those are chubby old bearded guys who are, you know, paying taxes and holding
down a day job here in the US.
So, yeah, you kicking enough of them doors sooner or later, you're going to encounter
somebody who is not what you were expecting.
You're going to get a mouth a lot fuller than you were planning for.
Oh, yeah.
Or one of our patrons and world-class marksman.
I got to have him on the show again.
You do.
You do.
You really need to.
Yeah.
Especially once he gets everything settled down by him, we'll have him on at least to talk about his perspective of the whole event.
Yeah.
I think that would be – I think his insights would be good.
I think so, especially knowing what he's dealt with lately up in the Appalachians.
Because he was – he got rolled by Hurricane Helene.
Thankfully, didn't have – I don't think he had any damage to his home him his family are fine but yeah him his family and i believe his friends he said
were okay too they did find them yeah yeah but he's still got he's still up to his eyeballs
and problems damn straight i'm not gonna pester him to come on this show until he's his life has
calmed down a little bit oh circle back through the comments before we grab another banner.
Raggle Fraggle.
Tell us about Katrina, Grandpa.
You smart aleck.
I like that guy.
I love it how Hurricane Katrina
is so old now
that I warrant the Grandpa conversation.
I'm 41 years old.
I turn 42 in four days.
It's not like I'm that old.
I just had a really exciting early 20s.
I was like a sophomore in high school.
Thank you for that, Nick.
Thank you.
I don't know.
I might have been a junior.
I don't remember.
But it's been quite a while.
Katrina, it was a defining event in in our generation one of many apparently that we got to experience
really appreciate all those yeah yeah all right next one yeah those those defining events are
becoming a little bit too frequent like if you know, if the next 20 years of my life could just be nice and quiet and boring,
that'd be fricking prime.
Yeah,
that's not going to happen.
So this one's another one of mine.
Oh,
Jesus Christ.
Buying prepared to go here.
I did.
I have to go here.
I have to go here.
Everybody.
When you thought it was going to give me a headache.
Yes.
Cause I've,
I've got one.
everybody when you thought was going to give me a headache yes because i've i've got one everybody talks about gear lists and focuses and focuses and focuses on what's in your bug out bag
what's in your edc what's in your ifac i saw a video on youtube today that was a thousand dollars
worth of preparedness like the whole show was you have a thousand dollars spent
on these things to get prepared i made it through about two minutes yeah i believe that look you you
cannot buy the most important things and that is the mindset that you require and that is the time investment in training yeah you can buy the
training but you can't buy the time you have to spend the time because dehydrated buckets of food
don't do you any good if you don't know how to make them your generator doesn't do you any good
if you don't know how to hook it up or you realize halfway through that oh yeah I bought the generator it'll be great
I bought all this I bought that I bought that
didn't buy the cable
chainsaw doesn't get you very far if you
don't know how to sharpen a chain
chainsaw chains you can dull a chainsaw
chain in about an hour and a half
I counter
that you can dull one in about three minutes
if you don't know oh yeah if you run it into rocks
sure but I mean even if you're using it right you only get an hour and a half or two hours of real use.
Yeah.
I actually, I've worn half the teeth off of the first chain that ever went on.
So when I got my chainsaw after Hurricane Ida, I have bought, I don't even know how many spare chains, and I have a spare bar for it.
Like, I've got parts, because if something breaks, you want to put it back into action.
I don't know how many spare chains I have.
I have not taken the first chain off the chainsaw.
I use it.
I sharpen it.
I use it.
I sharpen it.
I've worn half of the teeth off of this thing.
Good.
From constant, and not even like I use it that much, but every time I use it,
I go back and sharpen it.
And to me,
it's like,
first of all,
having a sharp,
having a sharp tool,
just,
you know,
make your life a lot simpler.
There is nothing more dangerous than a dull cutting tool.
But the other thing of it is,
is that to me,
it was practice.
Cause if I sharpen that chain until the teeth are completely smooth on the SOB,
I've got four or five, six other chains sitting in the shed.
Exactly.
But if I don't know how to sharpen a chain, when that chain gets dull and I pitch it in the trash and put another one on sooner or later, that's going to run out.
Yep.
Absolutely.
Oh, God, the comments just dropped another one that i totally forgot about
precious metals there's a point to precious metals and it's limited let me let me read
these and then we're gonna have to slip this one in go for it invest in precious metals it's
hammered into people prepping for the dollar collapsing but but when SHTF, you can't eat a bar of gold, a bar of silver
or a gold coin. Instead,
buy chocolate.
It can actually be eaten, will be
worth its weight in gold during SHTF.
To sum it up, chocolate gold coins
are better than regular gold coins.
Chocolate is greater than gold coins.
So let me
just say,
I think there's an argument to diversifying your, how do I put this?
I think there's an argument to be made when it comes to diversifying your accumulation of wealth.
Yes.
Like if you have money in savings, if you have money in a 401k, if you have all these other things taken care of, having money in precious metals i totally understand i
get it don't put all your eggs in one basket have things diversified statistically and historically
speaking every time the stock market goes to hell in a hand basket precious metals tend to hold
their value an interesting little footnote you can buy the same amount of gold that it took to
purchase the average home like a hundred years ago that same amount of gold that it took to purchase the average home like a hundred years ago,
that same amount of gold has appreciated
enough that it'll still buy the average home
today. Yep. Just
interesting little tidbit. So like there is certainly
that argument to be made that precious
metals hold their value over time, but the
problems are twofold.
First of all, as he pointed, as Guy the Comets
pointed out, you can't eat it
and you could trade eat it, and you
could trade with it, I guess, but if all
you have is these big gold bars to trade with,
silver coins, if they want it.
Because at the end of the day, the thing that my dad
kind of whooped into my head years ago was
stuff is only worth
what someone's willing to trade you for it.
And this is the exact opposite
argument as cash. Right now,
cash is good. Cash greases wheels.
But like if you get in a bad situation where like I need water and you're trying to give me cash, I don't need cash.
I need water.
You know what I'm saying?
Like the cash has what value people assign to it.
And in a weird enough situation, food, water and ammo are always going to trump cash and gold and silver so
i always go back to this idea that like i don't i don't begrudge a person who invests in in
in precious metals i would only say that don't put all your stuff into precious metals because
as you pointed out you can't eat it and you can't live in it so it's just one of
those things the other thing is that even though it's proven historically to be a good store value
the one thing it does not do is appreciate and i understand like fiat currency you know like you
know liberal economic order like don't get me started on that whole conversation again i get it
i get it that it's all ones and zeros in a bank and it's all fiat currency i understand
but if you put money in the stock market kind of sorted does you know gain interest over time and
hopefully it beats the rate of inflation so on so forth and gold and silver will not do that they will hold
value they will not appreciate in value one thing that does always appreciate the value is land
because they're not making any more of it so far
amen i gotta be you gotta be realistic about it there there will come a point
where where we will have more land available than we have right now on the planet.
Assuming humanity doesn't kill itself.
We'll get to the point where.
Bold of you to assume that.
Hey, man.
I'm all about the future.
As a kid, space travel, wildest thing ever.
Love it.
Would love to see us do more of it.
It's not happening right now.
Hey, people are working on it.
Elon Musk is claiming he's going to set up a thing on Mars, set up a thing on the moon, whatever.
Would love it if they did it.
Fine.
It is possible they could do it.
It is possible we could end up with more land than we have now.
But like Phil said, balanced portfolio.
As far as I'm concerned, if you do not have a.
Emergency fund, a properly funded emergency fund, you should not be investing in gold and silver.
You probably shouldn't be doing a lot of things we've discussed here this afternoon.
You should be taking your finances as seriously as you do everything else, because like if you don't have two weeks of food you should not be investing in gold and silver what is this what it what is a savings
account but preparedness it is it it's it's the barest minimum of preparedness because hey my air
conditioner broke just this summer i threw money at the problem the problem is gone bill had a tree land on his house
he had bought insurance he didn't have to throw money at the problem because he had insurance
that's preparedness but i think gold and silver much like i say about body armor and kit it's the
it's a next step you can take when you have your your emergency fund when you have your
retirement money that you're beginning to set aside it's a good step to take and it could be
helpful maybe in certain circumstances but it's by far not the most important no so we got two more
and we're like right at an hour so we'll go over just a little bit knock
these two out yeah op sec all right anybody that doesn't know for anybody that doesn't know
operational security or don't keep your freaking mouth shut go ahead nick how do you get a community
if you only ever keep your mouth shut you You can't.
Phil, you've made the decision to
pretty much abandon your OPSEC.
Oh yeah, you put your full name out there.
I have very
unabashedly, eight years ago,
had this conversation with my wife and just said
if I do this, it's it. It's like
virginity. There's no getting it back. It's gone.
Exactly.
Exactly. But you know But everybody needs a community
around them. What that community is, you need to decide. But your neighbors are going to know if
you're running a generator. Your neighbors are going to see your solar panels. Chances are your
family and friends are going to find out when you've bought a quarter of beef and have it stuck in your freezer across the room from me. These are not small things. People are going to
see it. You're not running a airtight military installation or a CIA operation where you can have
all the money in the world to throw around to hide these things. People are going to know that you have this stuff, especially people that are in your house,
your family, your friends, whoever. I'm sorry. With the way digital security is going nowadays,
your OPSEC is blown because Amazon knows all of the prepper stuff you bought.
Amazon knows all of the prepper stuff you bought.
If you see advertisements for Mountain House, Ready Wise, My Patriot Supply, congratulations, your OPSEC is blown.
I mean, if you have ever... So the thing I tell people about OPSEC is that I look at OPSEC, guy that comments saying your neighbors are going to see you eating Hot Pockets and ramen while they eat government cheese.
Absolutely.
People are going to notice.
This was pointed out to me by somebody, and I don't remember who it was so I can give them credit, but they pointed out to me.
They said in a long enough, bad enough situation, your neighbors will notice the person who's not losing weight, who's not dirty.
You're going to stand out unless you live like everybody.
Those clothes aren't trash.
Exactly.
So sooner or later, they're going to realize something's up over at that household.
But the...
I totally lost my train of thought.
You need the community.
You need the community.
But I was going to say that I think OPSEC is like a spectrum, much
like the conversation we had about a lot of things in the last hour.
100% OPSEC is impossible in the
digital age. If you have a social security number, if you've ever had a government ID,
God forbid you have a checking account, a savings
account, if you've ever been on the if you've ever
surfed the internet without a vpn have you bought property at any point yeah so like a hundred
percent opsec is impossible it's it is impossible and zero percent opsec is freaking responsible
it is so somewhere in the middle is a happy medium where you can guard enough of your secrets to not overly expose yourself unnecessarily and yet still be able to develop a community around you, be able to live like an average human being, not be the weirdo with the beard living in the woods all by himself with the room full of guns.
Like there's a happy medium in here.
woods all by himself with the room full of guns like there's there's a happy medium in here um one thing then like i had this conversation with my sister recently but she's really big on
documenting like trips her and her her my brother-in-law take on her instagram page but
she's always but he has asked her and she this, not to post anything until they're home.
Because you don't want to let the whole freaking world know you're five, six, seven hours away on vacation for the next couple of days.
Yep.
It's a reasonable step to take to guard a little bit of your OPSEC.
It doesn't cost you anything.
It doesn't take anything away from you.
Your cute, pretty pictures with the filters will go out on the internet for all of your friends to admire later. But it's
just one of those things of like, I can do A or
I can do B. And
A doesn't take much from me, but it
guards a little bit of that personal information.
So like, to me,
OPSEC is not a binary decision.
It can't be. Not in the modern world.
The way it's discussed online, though,
they definitely discuss it as a binary
choice. Either if you tell anyone, well, now you're screwed and you're going to die.
Okay.
Challenge accepted.
Anybody out there in listener land, and there's not a lot of y'all listening right now, so y'all have fun with this.
Google your first and your last name and see what comes up.
And if that doesn't...
Oh, there's a lot.
But wait.
Let's say you have a super common,
super common first and last name. There ain't a lot of Phil Rabelais lying around. So Google my
name and see what comes up. You, you will not be shocked. But if you have a super common first and
last name, Google your first and your last name and the town you live in and start watching what happens. We, modern people in today's world have such a
gigantic digital footprint. And so much of these information sources are all interconnected
nowadays that having 100% secure OPSEC is nonsense. And here's the thing, but even in the
military, it's nonsense. There is no 100% security.
It is about installing enough security to prevent the most pertinent information from getting into the wrong hands.
And that's not hard to do with a little bit of common sense.
Right, right.
It's just the way I see it discussed online where it's like, oh, if you talk to anybody about the fact that you're a prepper at all,
well,
people know you have a savings account, probably.
I mean, I have friends over
here all the time. They walk past my
extended pantry into my game room in the basement.
They know I have
quite an extensive pantry.
I'm sure
if things got bad enough,
they would come to me or call me.
I know that just be aware.
You,
you cannot keep everyone out all of the time and be a social human being.
Yeah.
So I'm going to wrap up with this one.
And this was my personal little bright because GMRS isn't for SHTF.
You should have got ham.
And I even hear this about ham.
I hear this about like there's some version of this nonsense about almost everything that gets used for comparison.
Don't get a mesh tech.
Yeah.
You don't need a radio.
You need mesh tastic.
You don't need mesh tastic.
You need something else.
Satellite phones. Satellite phones.
So let me just
take all of this and put it into
a bucket and tie it up with a nice pretty little bow.
Everything is
for preparedness if you use it
for preparedness and if it fits a
use case you have.
Everything is.
I know, I've heard people scream
very loudly that revolvers have no place in preparedness.
Bolt actions have no place.
You have to have a Glock 19 and AR 15,
or you're not a prepper.
I've heard some version of all this nonsense said about hundreds,
if not thousands of different topics.
And it always reeks to me of stupidity,
close-minded thinking,
elitism,
because everything can be used for preparedness. If you use it for that purpose, reeks to me of stupidity, closed-minded thinking, elitism, because
everything can be used for preparedness
if you use it for that purpose.
Like, the whole reason why I got my
family in a GMRS radio instead of ham
is very simply because if I can't talk to my wife
and my daughter on it, it doesn't do me as much
good, and I don't
really want to talk to weird men. I'm not on Grindr
or anything like that. I've got a group of men
I talk to already, but they're not strangers.
If the whole purpose of this implement is to be able to talk to people that are in
my group, and my wife and kid are kind of in my group by default, then I have to have the
radio service that they can actually make use of, and HAM doesn't do me a lot
of good. True. But it's the same
argument about, I mean mean hell our our friend who by the way is a
world-class muzzleloading champ you know long-range shooting champion if you sit there and you look me
dead in the eye and you tell me that muzzleloaders aren't for shtf he will kill you from so far away
i'm gonna introduce you to somebody that will scare the hell out of you at 700 plus yards
which is probably better with his muzzleloader than i am with my 300 wind mag at 700 yards and
that is not an underestimate yeah so i guess that's kind of i guess that's kind of just my
point is that i i reject this idea that these different things are not useful for preparedness.
I think the whole point of preparedness, like I've said many, many times over the years,
preparedness is a mindset.
It's not an activity, and it's not a hobby, and it's not something you purchase,
and it's not something you choose to be.
It is a mindset, and it guides all of these different things.
It guides you to put money into a savings account or to plan for retirement or to invest in
precious metals or to have a
food pantry that's six months deep or to have
more than just a box of ammo and a Glock
19 to your name. It guides you
down all these different roads.
It's kind of like
it's kind of like
I'm struggling with it. I had an analogy and it disappeared
that fast.
It's like different outfits,
man.
Pick the outfit that fits your situation and needs.
Yeah.
It's the simplest way to put it.
I mean,
yeah,
I do.
I have a ham radio license.
Yep.
Does my wife.
Nope.
So we have some FM RS radios laying around too,
because tell you what,
if I'm out in the garage
sometimes i forget my cell phone sometimes i ignore my cell phone because i get tired of all
the spam calls and texts thank you election season that is the thing what i don't ignore
is a call coming over my radio that i have sitting on my toolbox when i'm out working on my lawnmower
you know it's just it's just easier to use some of these other radios sometimes.
Is it the best you could have? Probably not. But if it's a tool your family will use,
it's better than the one they won't. Yeah. And I think at the end of the, at the end of the day,
like that's, that's kind of where I leave that whole conversation is that, you know, to me, there is, I can't think of a whole ton of things that cannot be utilized for
preparedness and given the right situation. So if you find yourself confronted with this person
that says that's not for preparedness, or this is the only right way, or this, that, and the other,
like I'm notorious for telling people all the time when they ask me a very simple question,
what they think is a very simple question, about what
is the best thing to do, and I
say in what situation.
That's the hard part. Because
the why matters more than the what.
The why drives the what.
And I can come up with a scenario
that's going to make whatever you have in your head
not work all of a sudden.
And I could probably come up with a scenario that would perfectly justify
something that doesn't seem like it'd be that useful.
It just comes down to like finding you don't,
don't try to put the square peg in the round hole,
ham radios and ham sandwiches.
You guaranteed to survive anything aliens famine or Russians chai comps.
And that's another,
that's another thing about
like that is the one thing i will handily admit that i've i have told people before because
you get the other side of this equation that the person that says well i have this thing
therefore it's going to help me survive and i always ask them survive what like there's people
that say i have a ham radio so i'll be able to call for help. I'm like, who are you going to call?
Like if I grab a GMS. Do you even know your local emergency ham radio frequency?
Do you have any friends that have ham radio, have ham radios that are monitoring the channel you were on?
Or have you established a comms plan with these people?
Like, I think what, I think going back to the thing you had earlier about how people buy preparedness,
I think people fall into the trap of I bought this thing.
It will do the thing and it will save my butt when I need it to.
But the things you buy are to facilitate actions that are driven by the skill set you've hopefully trained in ahead of the emergency.
So I give you if you have a radio, it doesn't matter what kind, but if you don't have someone on
the other side of that radio who's monitoring your frequency at a certain time so they don't
have to sit there and scan through frequencies and burn their batteries up 24 hours a day,
seven days a week waiting for you to call them.
If you haven't pre-done any of that and there's no one on the other side of that radio or
even worse, there's someone on the other side of the radio who's not friendly to you that radio is all of a sudden freaking useless it's
just like that lathe behind me phil i could sit you in front of it for as long as you want you
can figure out how to turn it on pretty easy you're a smart guy bet you can't throw put threads
on a bolt i mean it depends how bits are you going to let me break?
I bet you you don't even figure out
how to put it into the threading mode.
How many
combinations of levers do you think you have to throw?
Oh, second.
How many of those levers do you think you have to throw, Phil?
Oh, let's see if I can get me.
How the heck do I get me to be big?
Oh, that's big enough.
Hang on.
I don't know how to make me big.
I'm bad at this, guys.
There we go.
All right.
So you got a lever.
Well, I can't point on this thing.
You got a lever up in the back.
You got a lever down from the back.
You got two levers in the front.
You got half a dozen little feed wheels there
and about four levers on the carriage. How many two levers in the front. You got half a dozen little feed wheels there and about four levers on the
carriage.
How many of those levers do you think you need to thread a bolt, Phil?
All of them. Challenge
accepted.
Well, turns out there's only two
you don't need.
So I was almost right. You were close.
But it's exactly it.
That lathe is just as complicated
as ham radios.
If you understand how the levers work and what the buttons do,
it can do really cool stuff.
But if you don't know what they do,
and none of those are labeled because that thing was built in the 1920s
and hasn't been refurbished, still runs like a champ.
What happens if the buttons wear off your radio?
Yeah.
Do you know what the buttons do without the labels?
Probably not.
Yeah, I guess to me,
you know, like the whole point of this episode was really
just trying to dispel some of these rumors because
there are people in the community
and out of the community that perpetuate some of
this nonsense. And I really just want
people to think critically.
I know that's a concept is 2024,
but like think critically about the things that you're,
that you're hearing,
be very suspicious of a person who puts himself out there to be an expert.
Like I've said for years,
I'm an enthusiastic novice in most subjects,
the things I know very well,
I'll tell you,
I know very well,
but even then I'm a little hesitant to give like really hard fast advice on because i always go
back to this idea that like you know your situation better than i do so shouldn't you make that
decision yep or at the very least when you ask the question of what is best for this situation
at least know what your situation and capabilities are before you're ask the question of what is best for this situation, at least know what your situation and capabilities are
before you're asking the question.
Have a list of your requirements.
Me personally, when I got into ham radio,
I had a neighbor next door that had a ham radio.
I was like, oh, cool.
Oh, you cheated.
Yeah, yeah.
I had a Huey next door with a ground plane antenna
that he would talk on atmospheric skip with to people on the other side of the globe.
So I just walked over to his house and said, hey, man, how do you talk on a radio?
That looks pretty cool.
So he got me into it.
And around that same point, you know, when the first time you guys had me on the show, we were talking about modern day militia stuff, modern day militia activity.
I was involved with the militia for a little bit.
I make no secret of that.
It was fun.
Did a lot of firearms training,
did a lot of radio training.
Those guys all used ham radios too.
That's the other reason I got into it.
And you know what?
Ham radios,
they're kind of neat.
The house I bought recently is an old school house with those
old pole tv antennas going up in the back i think one of these days i'm going to try to convince
one of my younger cousins to climb that pole and mountain antenna for me because i'm a big guy i
fall and i hit the ground real hard i don't feel like doing that we We'll see. I might try to put a ham base station in the basement here.
That could be a fun project.
It could be.
But, you know, the thing about the ham radios that it has let me do,
people shit on the Baofeng UV5Rs as much as they want,
but they'll pick up NOAA frequencies.
They'll communicate on FMRS illegally.
You're not supposed to use them for FMRS.
They'll communicate on GMRS illegally. You're not supposed to use them for fmrs they'll communicate on gmrs
illegally you're not supposed to communicate on gmrs with those but they're a good foot in the
door to let you learn on something that's not going to cost 250 dollars yeah and if you have
to buy a truckload of them to outfit a family it won't empty out a bank account either and you know
what i'll tell you one thing we use them every year when we go up fishing to minnesota every boat gets a radio every boat
usually has a guy with a ham license in it because a lot of us do and it allows us to talk
five miles across the lake with a baofeng uvR because there's nothing in the way. It's a big open lake.
It's perfect for the use case.
All right.
Well, let's go ahead and punt this one out, man.
It's 6.17, which means any minute now you're going to get your wife's pretty little head
reach through your door and tell you
it's time to quit screwing around with your friends.
I'm told there's tuna salad sandwiches upstairs.
Do me a favor.
Stay in studio for a couple of minutes afterwards
so I can get this download done.
But we'll go ahead and rock this one out.
Thank you all for hanging around with us.
I think we got up to a total of like 11 people
watching the stream, which is impressive.
Maybe doing this on the same day and time every week, which is Thursdays at 5 p.m. Central, maybe helping.
And next week we're going to I don't know yet how it's going to work out.
We have a we have a big meet and greet with a whole group of people who are on social media.
I was told to expect six of them.
Nice.
So we're going to wait and see how that melee breaks out.
It'll be all right.
It'll be a good time.
We'll see you guys next time.
Matter of fact,
podcast going out the door by everybody. Thank you. Outro Music