The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Reading the Newspaper and Riffing

Episode Date: September 19, 2025

Well...another Friday is upon us and there is no better way to spend a Friday morning while the rest of the world is either praising death, fearing death, or giving their priceless attention to morons... that don't deserve it.Get Prepared with Our Incredible Sponsors! Survival Bags, kits, gear www.limatangosurvival.comEMP Proof Shipping Containers www.fardaycontainers.comThe Prepper's Medical Handbook Build Your Medical Cache – Welcome PBN FamilyPack Fresh USA www.packfreshusa.comSupport PBN with a Donation https://bit.ly/3SICxEq

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I guess we need a Friday newspaper reading and riffing intro, but what I thought I'd do is throw the old one threat one solution. The best investment I've made in the last month, month and a half, without a doubt, whenever I started this thing. Truth, tradition, hope, the epic times. You know, one of the, the things that we specialize in here at PBN are antidotes to the chaos. For years, we've promoted calm within chaos, right? Antidotes to the chaos. Your path back to stability. The Prepper Broadcasting Network, okay? Self-reliance and Independence, the original sort of tagline. Visit PBNFamily.com, join our community. Sign up for a membership right now. I don't have better proof than
Starting point is 00:01:00 what's happening in the world as we speak and the reason for you to join our community. Come to the continuity meetings. Take advantage of the membership series, content, discounts, documentation, the whole nine yards, okay? Visit pbnfamily.com. You know, this investment cost me about as much as a PBN membership for three months. Our PBM membership will, if you use the promo code prep on, you'll get it $50 for the year membership, $50 in our community for the year. visit pbnfamily.com folks what's up dad my man i'm here on youtube we're on rumble we're on x i'm on youtube uh to broadcast live to my father because you know the rest of the of the youtube
Starting point is 00:01:47 uh admin be damned that's what i have to say to them they make every day of my life a struggle and have stolen away from me the opportunity to uh do anything on their platform, which is really just becoming a glorified television network now, right? They've taken, what, 15 years to go from one of the most innovative platforms ever to a TV network. Congratulations, YouTube. Born de Brat is with us. Good morning, my man. How are you?
Starting point is 00:02:22 Let's start with opinion. Start with opinion. I haven't looked at opinion. I've looked at mind and body. I haven't looked at life. tradition um this is wonderful okay i'm telling you right now maybe we need like an over the over the shoulder cam um we got k ruby check in here if anybody can reach k ruby check and get her to come on and the show i love this woman man why humanity can't code its way to purpose she's
Starting point is 00:02:54 k has been in every issue of the epic time since i've read it all always relating to AI, always relating to the digital relationship, the relationship between man and the digital, mankind and the digital. Just great, great all the time, great. Every article great. She couldn't, here, this is a wild one here, man. Opinion piece, she couldn't read her own diploma by public schools past students but failed society. We were just talking about public school system, right? weren't we the other day the public school system i can't remember which show it was an estimated 21 percent of u.s adults are functionally illiterate meaning they have difficulty reading and
Starting point is 00:03:39 comprehending instructions and filling out forms a functionally illiterate u.s adult is unable to complete tasks such as reading job descriptions or filling out paperwork for social security and Medicaid. Worse still the statistics say that 54% of U.S. adult population reads at or below a sixth grade level. I think that all these problems with reading are born out of making people read things they don't want to read. Do you know what I mean? And if I were in charge of schools, one of the first things that I would do is I would institute a three book, and this would be really hard, maybe, maybe not, like a three book choice sort of structure. Like instead of everybody's reading The Odyssey, which nothing wrong with The Odyssey, but instead of that, I think I'd do three books at a time.
Starting point is 00:04:41 And you decide which of the three you'd like to read and make them all challenging for the age group. You know what I mean? But even a three-book choice gets you a little more invested in a book. I couldn't read anything. I didn't want to read any books, man, in school. And then I read a Dean Kuntz book. And then I read every Dean Kuntz book back to back to back, back, back, back, back, back, back, thousands of pages. I got my mother's collection right up here on the show.
Starting point is 00:05:13 I couldn't get enough. You know what I mean? And now it's just reading has become a joy, and it's become a joy because I've realized, oh, instead of the way you learn in school, pick a book up, read it, because the teacher says so, you can just read the books you want to read. And the other secret of reading that people really, they suffer a lot is read before bed. Reading before bed is like, it's like a tranquilizer. Like, you'll fall asleep. Rapido. Why humanity can't code its way to purpose, K. Rubichick, my hero.
Starting point is 00:05:53 If you grew up in America in the middle of the 20th century, you remember a world where change was steady, but you could keep up with it. These shifts were big, but they happened over years. The cordless phone, then to the first cell phones, the family typewriters are placed with the home computer. Today, the curtain has been pulled back, and artificial intelligence isn't trickling. into our lives the way past technologies did it is pouring in at full force kids are using it to do their homework teachers can no longer tell if essays were written by students or by a machine big corporations and governments are delegating decision making to machines remember we talked about that on the preppers roundtable the other night we talked about uh who was it albania
Starting point is 00:06:38 was it albania one of them one of them's got AI on deck in the government as like a consultant These are not abstract changes They are the lived reality of people Trying to find their place in a world That feels like it's moving too fast It is moving too fast But it's only moving too fast When you're in front of this stuff
Starting point is 00:07:02 You don't have to be in front of this stuff This whole thing with the The nation is gripped Maybe if you didn't grow up in a deject area like I did you're unaware of this and I think most of America is unaware of this but America's gripped right now because they're watching this succession of people who don't matter say horrible things on the internet for attention right they've come to believe that this this aspect of life is actually life
Starting point is 00:07:44 I did a podcast earlier this week to don't give these people your time or attention. These people are not deserving of your time or attention. If you decide that I'm not deserving of your time or attention, then move on with your life. You're watching successions of clips of lunatic women primarily, talk about how elated they are over Charlie Kirk's death, and the whole nation is gripped, the whole nation is sitting there, I don't know what's happened to my country. What is going on in America today? What could possibly have gone wrong in this
Starting point is 00:08:23 country for us to reach this low? You know, my mother used to say all the time, not in a bad way, but in just to put it in the back of your head. She used to say, women are evil. And it wasn't, It wasn't an accusation to say, women are all evil or all women are evil. But what mom knew because she was a woman with four sisters, she knew, and what she meant when she said this was, women are capable of incredible evil. It's not to say, it's just a statement. See, immediately your mind goes to, well, men too. It's just what she used to say. women are evil like she was telling me a thing about a thing that i should prepare for right
Starting point is 00:09:14 it wasn't to say well which one's more evil is men more evil is women more evil are trans more evil people didn't talk that way there wasn't a constant comparison there wasn't a constant game being played the point i'm trying to make to you is you don't know any of these people none of these people matter you could argue that none of these people actually even exist If you really sit down and think about it, does any of the people that showed up on your feed or that video that you watched or that video that somebody sent you or that thing, right, that drove you crazy and made you sit there and go, what happened to America? Do any of those people actually exist?
Starting point is 00:09:58 To you in your life. You'll never see them. You'll never cross paths with any of the people who've been on Fox News saying how happy they are that Charlie Kirkda. You'll never run into these people. These, you could argue their very existence because in a world pre-cell phone and pre-connection, you never know they existed.
Starting point is 00:10:19 They could say whatever heinous shit they want. You've never hear a word from them. They don't, they are not worthy of your time, and they barely exist. To you, I mean, to you. And to some people, they exist. They're their daughter, their wife, their husband, whatever they are right i don't know if we had too many wives and husbands in that list to be
Starting point is 00:10:40 honest with you but whatever um it's very common for people to say terrible things in in private you know what i mean amongst friends a month you know never before have we had this so that we could broadcast it do you know what i mean i could go into a greater breakdown of condition of the American woman and the many predicaments they're in, you know what I mean? But just suffice it to say, like, if you're getting worked up over all these people putting all these terrible videos out, they don't even exist. If it were 20 years ago, you'd not only would never know they exist. You'd never even, you know what I'm saying? Does this resonate or is the world so trapped in social media that we can't imagine like there's only a handful of people in your life that actually matter you know what I mean if you're a guy like me maybe it's a bigger pool because I have you know the type of business that I run and such you can't I mean we got to get back to reality folks you know if everything everyone says and everything capture
Starting point is 00:12:06 online is a part of the definition of your life and the definition of your country then good good luck do you know what i mean good luck does it not mean that their comments resonate with people at a time and it like this in a way that it shouldn't maybe i don't who cares who cares seriously one thing you should not do is cower in the face of all of this i've seen so many people like petrified over this right like the woman with the blue hair down the street's going to show up at your door and shoot you you're not you go you all you're doing is giving these idiots power and more importantly than who cares about power you're giving them seconds of your precious life don't do it get the hell off social media if you can't handle it you know what i mean
Starting point is 00:13:03 get off of it don't waste your time on it and definitely don't waste your time with these people because these people don't exist it's not dehumanization it's the reality that they don't exist they pop in and then they pop out they're like a pop up in your life they pop up one time say something crazy go oh my god i'm so mad about that i'm gonna think about that all day then they pop out of your life you'll never see them again enjoy your life why am i doing this on a friday this is a part of it enjoying a friday You know what I mean? K. Rubichick says meaning comes from the same place it always has.
Starting point is 00:13:42 The spirit, the conscience, and the inner seeking that no system, no ideology, and no machine can erase. Bravo. For every benefit of efficiency, a little more of human judgment and connection was quietly outsourced. Man, that's happening all the time. Listen, I'm going to read this on my own time, okay? I'm trying to cherry pick the goods for you in it, but I really do enjoy her articles. In Culture Wars, museums become a battleground, the National Museum of American History. That is true, man.
Starting point is 00:14:17 That is true and sad, you know? That is true. Except the reality of culture wars and museums is thus. Like, good luck, modern artists. Good luck. Good luck modern artists. You know what I mean, fighting that battle. You go and see art that is so breathtaking.
Starting point is 00:14:44 I need a good trip. Maybe this weekend is time for a good trip to the VMFA. Anytime you lose your hope in humanity. A moment like this, when you're looking around the country going like, oh, my God. I've done this five times in my life, probably since 2020, where you lose all hope for humanity. and then I go to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Starting point is 00:15:07 which is free 365 days open a year free walk in Marvel you walk in you marvel you would avoid the modern art section because modern art looks like modern art is basically like with whipped cream or sprinkles on top of this and then they'll coat it in a varnish and people will gather around and pretend like it's art.
Starting point is 00:15:36 It's terrible. There's no point in looking at it. It's a waste of time. But, you know, you talk about, you talk about Dolly. You talk about looking at early American landscape, like 18th, 19th century American landscape art. Probably some of my favorite. You go back to the romantics and to the Renaissance.
Starting point is 00:16:02 the religious art of the renaissance is peak output by humanity that's what it is it's magic it's magic you know what i mean in the world of ai to imagine a guy like dante gabriel rosetti gushing in front of a canvas painting the picture for like the 15th time of the woman that he loves and every little detail and eyelash and come on we're turning into different things we've got to be careful no human ideal has ever fully reached no history a straightforward assent to perfection not bad theodore Derry what Dahlrimple Theodore Dahlrymple One of the epigraphs
Starting point is 00:16:58 To the late Richard Pipe's great book The Russian Revolution cites The Russian Minister of Justice in 1915 Who said the paralytics of the government are struggling feebly as if unwillingly With the epileptic's of the revolution I don't even know what that means Sorry, you lost me in the first paragraph, Theo.
Starting point is 00:17:23 When I go to an exhibition of the jewels of Muslim art, I do not thereby believe in or in any way support Islam. While I detest the way in which transsexualism has been turned into an ideology and an ideology that I consider dull, false, and mendacious and harmful, I do not exclude the possibility that one or some of its adherence might produce artistic work of value that was inspired by it. In any case, its products will one day be of historic interest. Yeah, that's one of the big things about going to museums, you know,
Starting point is 00:17:55 is seeing not just the paint on canvas or the sculpting, but to see things like the jewelry, like the pottery, like, you know, what ancient Egyptians crafted, what early Han Dynasty artifacts were found. What it does for you guys is it brings you into a world where you remember we're all the same thing. It's another reason why I love Warhammer. You know that?
Starting point is 00:18:21 I love Warhammer because at the core of Warhammer is the human skull. Humanity is beseeched on all sides. There is nothing but war for humanity. But you know what? It's the darkest universe I've ever read about, you know, gotten into. The darkest fictional universe of them all for humanity. But at least we have a unified message.
Starting point is 00:18:50 We might be spread across light years on a variety of different planets, living in absolute squalor, eating corpse starch to survive and feeding the giant war machine. But at least all of humanity is fighting for survival together. And in an age like this, man, that just feels good. You know what I mean? the revolt against God wow the epic times here serialized an adaptation from the Chinese of how the specter of communism is ruling our world
Starting point is 00:19:27 by the editorial team of the nine commentaries on the Communist Party oh I see I see I see religious chaos this is interesting how the specter of communism is ruling our world. So they're pooling this. This is one of the things that the Epic Times does. It really fights for the heroes of Chinese culture who are standing against the Chinese Communist Party.
Starting point is 00:19:54 In today's church, as many bishops and priests preach deviated theology while corrupting and consorting with their followers in a nonstop series of scandals. Many believers go to church for habits' sake or even as a form of entertainment or socializing rather than out of genuine commitment to cultivating their character are coming closer to God. Religions have been corrupted from within. The result is that people lose their confidence in religions and their righteous belief in the divine
Starting point is 00:20:21 and end up abandoning them. If man does not believe, then the divine will not protect him and ultimately humankind will be destroyed. In 2002, the Boston Globe carried a series of reports on sexual molestation of children committed by Catholic priests. The investigation reeled that over several decades close to 250 Boston priests have been had molested children
Starting point is 00:20:43 at the church similar revelations quickly spread across the U.S., eventually public pressure compelled Pope John brought a guy with religious corruption is rife more churches and temples have been built looking all the more splendid on the surface while righteous belief
Starting point is 00:21:00 the deputy chairman of China's Buddhist association referring to the report of the Chinese Communist Party's ninth congressional said the ninth 19th congress report in a contemporary buddhist scripture and i have handed copied it three times he also stated the chinese communist party is today's buddha and bodhistrava bodhisattva and the 19th congress report is contemporary buddhist scripture in china and it shines with the glowing rays of the communist party's belief yeah
Starting point is 00:21:39 It's sort of covering how modern religion has been literally corrupted but also helped along the way. Oh, look, it's Joel Salatin. Free the enslaved food system, Molly Englehart. I like it. I like it. I want to read you this piece about, where are we at? I want to read you this piece about how silence slows down your heart and grows neurons. it's important it's important i heard a guy talk about i don't it was a black guy talking about it
Starting point is 00:22:17 i don't think it wasn't like thomas soul or something it was like i can't remember you know how you see so much content you can't remember but he was talking about how in rich or affluent homes you find quiet right he says in those neighbor those neighborhoods are quiet. Why? Because you can think in the quiet. And he said, you go to the ghettos of America and they're always loud. You know, because it's harder to think when it's, I don't know, it was a weird way to look at it. It was a weird way to look at the two different sort of types of living conditions. But the silence has always resonated with me. You know what I mean? I've written a lot of books in my life and the best writing that I do is about 4 a.m. to 6 a.m. You know what I mean? Because of that, because of the silence.
Starting point is 00:23:16 But this article is from the mind and body section, and it says virtue medicine, how silence slows down your heart and gross neurons. Bernardi randomly ordered six types of music and inserted two-minute pauses of silence to bring the subjects back to bass. This was a study done in Italy in 2006. Yet contrary to his expectations, when the subjects listened to these pauses, they didn't return to baseline at all. Instead, they relaxed. The effect was quite remarkable. He said that the pause silence was much more effective than the music at relaxing them. Where is this B-10?
Starting point is 00:24:00 Continued on B-10. You don't realize the noise in your life. you don't realize the cacophony that is your life on a regular base you know a lot of people sleep with like TVs on and fans on and anything to distract them from the fact that they're sleeping and you can very easily live a life where every moment of your day is noise it's really possible now especially with the phone you begin to abhor the silence you do you begin to abhor the silence you do you begin to abhor the silence you look at it like
Starting point is 00:24:38 oh there's a moment of silence what can I watch what can I listen to what can I put on the phone should I put Spotify on put a playlist on what should I do the body listens Bernardi from Italy's study was the most downloaded article in heart
Starting point is 00:24:56 a peer-review journal of cardiologists while it might have been might seem intuitive that the silence would calm the body, no one had empirically demonstrated it before. Noise can be defined as unwanted sound. When noise travels by a sound waves and enters your eardrum, where it moves to the inner bones activating the cochlea, the spiral-shaped structure in the inner ear,
Starting point is 00:25:22 noise activates the same fight-or-flight response that you would have, if you were harassed while walking down the street. Your body's responding to the increased cardiac output, or your body responds with increased cardiac output. So, man, silence is demonstrated in Bernardi's study lowers heart rate and blood pressure. It's so much so that silence may be potentially useful in management of cardiovascular disease. Two years ago, it was going down to like 12 degrees one January night, and I went out to a wildlife management area to camp out. just for the challenge whatever right and i remember i really only had a few things to worry about
Starting point is 00:26:11 the biggest one keeping the camp stove going all night so i spent a lot of time cutting wood with minimal uh tools you know what i mean and i remember getting to like midday maybe like one o'clock in the afternoon something like that was like 12 1 o'clock in the afternoon and i had been alone in the isolation of the woods in the quiet of the woods no phone no podcast on none of that kind of stuff and uh i remember this weird feeling coming over me it was the best way to explain it was like it felt like a reset you know what i mean it felt like something in me was pardon me was resetting and everything just was like whoa you know like almost like it It was just enough time for my silence, maybe just enough silence for me to filter out all the digital news, all the news of life's worries and so on.
Starting point is 00:27:09 Really weird. You read an article like this, you wonder, was it my brain? Was it my heart? Was it my adrenal system? Or was it all of them? Sort of like slowing to a level where you could actually relax again. Contrary to Bernardi's observation that silence led to relaxation after stimulus. curse the reason that listening to silence actually triggered a sort of positive stress response
Starting point is 00:27:35 or you stress don't know what that means silence then is not passive but an active listening process there's something active about listening to nothing cursed hypothesized although this study was conducted on mice it raises exciting possibilities about whether similar effects might occur in humans the concept of active silence becomes even more intriguing when one considers what happens in the human brain during quiet moments. Robert Sator, a cognitive neuroscientist at Montreal Neurological Institute of McGill, told the Epic Times that psychology, psychologically, there may not be such a thing as silence. It's a big, big, big, long article.
Starting point is 00:28:21 But suffice it to say, probably do you good to search for. some silence in your life, a good respite, you know what I mean, from the from the troubles of the day, right? Remember the troubles of today are enough from last week? The troubles of today are enough for today.
Starting point is 00:28:42 A path to healing forges a hero. Small acts of kindness. Do we do that anymore? Is that a thing? Oh, here we go. The artistic and paragon of Renaissance womanhood Bauticelli
Starting point is 00:29:00 Bauticelli Yeah The Florentine Sandro Bauticelli painted some of the most beautiful and beloved artworks of the Italian Renaissance What are we just talking about?
Starting point is 00:29:16 Yeah, Boutichelli. Good luck. Good luck fighting the cultural art wars with artificial intelligence when you have to go up against boss battles like Boaticelli from the Renaissance Home schooling with confidence
Starting point is 00:29:31 They have this cool little section All the time for kids It's the four kids only section Arthur S. Buranaut When I was a little lad You want to read it? A little poem for your day When I was a little lad
Starting point is 00:29:47 I slept in a tent in the orchard Where the pink and white apple blossoms bloomed And all the day long The mad bees boomed And when dust came quietly still heard the voice of the whip poor will. I don't know what that means.
Starting point is 00:30:00 Far away in the thickets. When I was a little lad, my tent was pitched in the orchard. And the white-faced moon came up at night and drenched the trees with silver light and peered inside the open tent to say goodnight before he went, on again, on his journey. but like one of the things that reading newspaper does is it activates like a bunch of different emotions in you because it's not it's a different act than scrolling it's a different act than reading news on the internet
Starting point is 00:30:42 it also gives you things that you are not expecting but not in a way that it's like intrusive you know what i mean because it's not a video you know what i mean and it also a lot of this stuff doesn't come with a bodacious, like image. You know, like these stories, yeah. But even this right here, it's just a couple old people walking into their house. You know what I mean? It's not like everything is a, a thumbnail. Everything is wild.
Starting point is 00:31:13 Everything is out there to be wild. And it's, I don't know. Non-toxic ways to eliminate ants, uninterested. The home section is not bad sometimes. It's not really. my favorite. They do some good recipes in the back. Giving always gives back. Yeah, that's true. That is true. Don't blur the lines. Make this stainless steel cleaner for just pennies. What is it? It's got to be lemon, something. What does it? Start with a clean spray bottle.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Pour in white vinegar, blue dawn liquid, washing detergent, and water. And spray top and shake to mix. Okay. Stainless steel cleaner for pennies. We prepers. We dig that kind of stuff, man, for sure. So you got white vinegar, dawn, liquid, washing, dishwashing detergent, and water. So diluted. One in a third cups, white vinegar, five drops, blue dawn, five drops, blue dawn, dishwashing, detergent, two-thirds a cup of water. Not bad. Oh, man. How to choose the right hamster. Now we're getting down to the shit that matters.
Starting point is 00:32:31 I'm not even joking. It's an awesome article. How do we find a nice hamster for our daughter, a friend of hers as a hamster that bites? And we don't want that. Wow. So you forget that that stuff exists in life. You forget that those little things exist in life.
Starting point is 00:32:50 You know what I mean? When you get wrapped up in all this internet noise and all this madness that's happening in the next, nation you get wrapped up in a bunch of people who don't matter putting videos out online check out the lemitango survival gear back there huh nice that's when you get into trouble man you know i don't make any money from the epic times um i did they're not an affiliate i don't even link to them but all i'm telling you with these shows the reason i started these shows every Friday is because I get a really nice feeling reading the newspaper.
Starting point is 00:33:27 And I wanted to share that with you. It's really nice to drink coffee and read the news. Read it. On paper, you know, the ink is probably like giving me cancer or destroying my testosterone or something like that. I don't know. Actually, reading newspaper, probably boosts testosterone, right? It seems like all those old things.
Starting point is 00:33:47 That's what they do. I highly recommend it. You need a good paper. That's why I read the Epic Times. I don't have to go in here and see all the reasons you are terrible for being white. You know what I mean? Or something to that effect. So I like the Epic Times, man.
Starting point is 00:34:11 If you're missing something, if you're on this path back to stability with us here at PBN, Consider the news, man. Is there something about it? There's also something about dad. If you're a dad, there's something about dad sitting at the table, sitting at his chair, sitting at the couch with the newspaper open. There's stability in and of itself. And a lot of that has to do with the fact that you're not doing this like everybody else.
Starting point is 00:34:41 So your kids look over and they see like there's a thing over there that's different and it's dad. and he's in newspaper, and it's, I don't, it's an anchor point or something. You know what I mean? It's a beautiful thing, really. So, look, enjoy your weekend, folks. We got a ton of great stuff coming up. Tons of great stuff coming up for you. Oh, no, I thought I would zoom in closer.
Starting point is 00:35:03 No, not really. Okay. We got a ton of great stuff coming up over the weekend. Preper camp is on the horizon, the tinfoil hat contest. We'll get your photos to that. if you're a member you got a great membership uh podcast yesterday if you're stressed out about the kind of things that a lot of people are stressed out right now like public safety um or safety in general right self-defense those kinds of things like are the crazy liberal trans antifa warriors
Starting point is 00:35:35 coming to get me um i did a good breakdown of sort of all my favorite things that have to do security and self-defense and situational awareness. You know, what really serves me at the end of the day. And that went out yesterday. Another thing I threw in the member's room is Taiwan's new public safety document. You could find it yourself. I found it in English and threw it in our members-only room over at Element. I may send it out via email too.
Starting point is 00:36:06 It's just an interesting way to look at a population as they sort of understand. and you can read it in the document they understand that they're going to war with China they understand that it's coming and that's it they've they've decided it's time to put out a document
Starting point is 00:36:28 the government is put out a document that is pretty effective right Hunter SF says whip poor will is a bird that makes sense that makes sense never heard of it in my whole life so yeah you know we're come on there's there's many of you out there viewing this thing live right now
Starting point is 00:36:49 go to pbnfamily.com and sign up okay there are things that a person can do in their life that just i mean they just like i want to say shear off but it's not the right they lop is what they do they lop the stress off of your life the anxiety putting up long-term food storage did that for me. Carrying a firearm did that for me. Having a network of people that I could go to to ask questions, to ask for help, to talk about various things, really did that for me. You know what I mean? And that's what we've built here at PBN. So go to PBNFamily.com and join the membership side. Use the promo code prep on. Wait, hold on. I got a banner for you. I don't have to say it all. I could show you. But use the promo code prep on for those of you who are listening only.
Starting point is 00:37:44 P-R-E-P-O-N, get $10 off your annual membership. Today, it's payday. Do it. And I can guarantee you, man, you're going to feel a lot better. You're going to feel a lot better the more prepared you get because you're going to understand that stability is made by you and not by somebody else who could fail you. Right? It's not your government that creates the stability in your life. It's not the Jeff Bezos, right? You need to be the person responsible for stability in your life. And if you're dependent on everything for everything, then it's really hard. It's really hard to get that stability.
Starting point is 00:38:22 You know what I mean? Real quick before we go, I want to talk about Doc Forgey's amazing book, The Preppers Medical Handbook, our long-term lifetime member, by the way, Dr. William Forgey, long-term sponsor here at PBN and his amazing. book, the Preppers Medical Handbook, you'd be absolutely insane not to put it on your shelf or something like 19 bucks or whatever it is at Amazon. It is an essential. It isn't essential. And if you like it and you dig it and you go to pvnfamily.com, we've got a whole section over there about it too. And all the items that are inside of it, you can purchase every over-the-counter
Starting point is 00:38:59 item that's in that book over at pvnfamily.com. And my biggest argument always, for getting the prepper's medical handbook is you buy the preppers medical handbook at amazon then you uh go to pbnfamily.com buy every over-the-counter item that's in the book put it in a tupperware container with whatever first aid gear you have and now all of a sudden you have yourself a uh do i say tupperware i meant like a rubber made type container some kind of waterproof container whatever um put in a damn ammo can if you want to to. Now you have a fully functioning sort of medical plan where you can use the book to diagnose and treat and you know for a fact that everything that you're going to need the
Starting point is 00:39:47 diagnosis and treat is going to be in that kit. You know, it's sort of our seamless, seamless first aid preparation for you. All right. I got to go, folks. I am hungry. I haven't eaten yet today. Tommy growling. Got a big day of writing. I may be working with a publisher. I may be getting ready to publish a book. It may be a really cool book. I may not be able to really talk about it yet, but it may be incoming. I want to thank you all out there for listening,
Starting point is 00:40:20 supporting PBN. You know, you're the reason I get to do all this stuff that I do. And can't wait to see all of you who show up at PreparCamp 2025, man. It's going to be a great one. But, you know, take your preparedness seriously, folks. These things ain't going away, unfortunately. you know, get on the path back to stability.
Starting point is 00:40:42 Talk to you.

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