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[00:00:03] You're listening to PBN. Your path back to stability here.
[00:00:34] Happy Friday, PBN family on the heels of a meteoric weekend into Monday. Monday, which will be something, man. There's a lot of things lining up. You know, yesterday we spent a lot of time talking about the potential for Monday in a terrifying way. Friday going into the weekend, I wanted to pump the brakes. I wanted to take a breath.
[00:01:04] We have plenty of content for you about preparedness and you're going to hear a lot this weekend about all kinds of stuff. You're going to hear a lot Monday, you know, all these next days and then days to come. And I really do think that, as I mentioned yesterday, 2025 will be one of these years of conflict. You know what I mean? We'll see conflict in a lot of different places. It could stutter.
[00:01:30] It could sputter out as the year goes on. I mean, big things are happening already. Ceasefire talks in the Middle East. I just, the ceasefire talks seem like, it seems like Israel has a cancer to cut out around them and they never quite get it completely, you know, burnt out.
[00:01:58] And I just, you know, maybe that's life for them. Maybe that is literally life for them is slash and burn. Lower the numbers of, you know, the radicals around them that want to kill them and obliterate them and lose the youth in their own military to do it and sacrifice and all that. And then try to go back to life as normal and wait.
[00:02:25] I mean, it always feels like this waiting for the next bit of chaos and the next war when the wolves get too close. Morning, Jay Firk. Thanks for joining us. Do appreciate it. Looking forward to the show tomorrow morning. Phoenix survival guys don't miss it. So, yeah, we got. I wanted to take time today.
[00:02:54] To read from the greats. You know, there is a I think a lot of people. Don't go back to the greats enough. And that might it might sound silly like the greats and I'm talking poets and I'm talking writers and we could even talk artists. But I don't want to get into art today. But there's a reason why these books and these paintings and these museums and these libraries exist.
[00:03:24] And it's for moments like these. It's for moments when like just what we talked about yesterday with people feeling the weight of the time. Right. People feeling the weight of the time. Those are the moments when we return back to the greats. Right. A lot of people return to the Bible in these times. And you read people like Shakespeare and you see a lot of echoes of the Bible within. I mean, that makes sense.
[00:03:55] Fifteen hundreds. Right. Wasn't a whole lot of great reading going on outside of the Bible and the Bible being very poetic in and of itself. So I thought. There's preparedness stuff to talk about. There are there's a story about Iran wanting to help with the wildfire recovery that we'll look at. But there are some things I want to tell you about and so forth. But it's Friday.
[00:04:24] We're going into a heavy weekend into a heavier week. Not only will be will much of the nation be tested like through this political. Onboarding of Donald Trump on Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday on Monday. On top of all that, it's like we're going into a polar vortex and very, very far south. Very interesting situation.
[00:04:53] I've heard even that maybe even Phil Rabelais of the Matter of Facts podcast could have snow down in Louisiana. That's. Well, probably fun, to be honest, probably pretty fun if they get something worth playing in. But it's heavy stuff. It's a heavy time. And one of the things that I love about reading old works. And what I think people miss about reading old works like there's great poetry.
[00:05:23] Well, I can't say that. I don't know. I don't read new poets at all. I know I have no like maybe Maya Angelou. You know what I mean? It's about all I could attest to modern. Hunter S7 chats is I'm gonna have to call Elon and ask why my notifications aren't working. Yeah, that's a weird one. Give him a ring. See if he'll see. He'll he'll front us a couple million dollars while you're at it for preparedness national preparedness.
[00:05:56] For me, it's always a reminder of just how we've all been suffering the same things forever. Because it's easy to feel like, why was I born in this time with these troubles and these problems? And why do I have to deal with this? And why is it that I have to face this down and all that kind of stuff?
[00:06:16] And then you read something like Hamlet and you realize that if you know what you're reading, and I think Hamlet the to be or not to be requires like very minimal picking apart a poetic language to understand. But to me, it is just this. It's this great passage that is a reminder that from the time it was written in the fifteen hundreds.
[00:06:44] How little humans have changed the human condition has changed the human struggles have changed. And when you're feeling overburdened like that, like many people are right now. It's very valuable to know like. We've been on this path a long time, many people have survived things like this and much worse.
[00:07:08] The value of the greats in in poetry in particular is their ability to. In sort of a distilled way, show you these things. So in other words, like you read like the Russian greats. Right. And those books are hard to read. I've never completed one of those books, you know, crime and punishment, the things that like smart people tell you all the time you should read.
[00:07:35] And it's such amazing writing in every sentences of like, yeah, that's fine. But to me, it's not very gripping stuff. And. You get through a book like that, it takes a lot of time. What poets do. Why poets are sometimes better than, you know, novelists is because they distill it in things that are short and easy to understand. They have the ability to still something like that. Right.
[00:08:05] Some of you know, maybe this whole passage and then many of you don't. And some of you will recognize things from it. But. This is from Hamlet to be or not to be. Now, almost everyone knows to be or not to be. That's the question. You know, let's put it up. Let's put it up onto the video. For those of you listening, we're going to take the whole thing and put it up on the screen because the word itself is is good to follow along with.
[00:08:37] So to be or not to be, that's the question. Whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune or to take arms against the sea of troubles and by opposing end them. There's a lot there, man. Right. The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune has become what everybody who's on social media deals with. It's not outrageous fortune anymore. It's outrageous.
[00:09:05] It's outrageous fame or notoriety. Right. It's to put your opinion out there, to put yourself out there and understand that now you're a target for all. It's the comment section. The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune is basically the modern version of that today is the comments. It's what it's what people have to deal with in the comment section.
[00:09:29] So is it nobler to deal with that or is it nobler to take on take arms against the sea of troubles and by opposing end them. Right. To the great battle. Right. The great battle of day to day life. The. The great sea of troubles that we all face day in and day out. To die to sleep no more and by a sleep to say we end the heartache and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is there to.
[00:10:00] There's a consummation devoutly to be wished to die to sleep to sleep perchance to dream. Ah, there's the rub for in that sleep of death. What dreams may come when we're shuffled off this mortal coil. Now when he talks about death man, this is where this is the section where everybody can sort of. Understand right must give pause. There's the respect that makes calamity of so long life.
[00:10:29] Right. Long life is crazy with battles and wars and so forth. Right. For who would bear the whips and scorns of time. The oppressor's wrong. The proud man's contundely the laws delay the insolence of office. Right.
[00:11:09] And the spurns that patient merit of unworthy takes. When he himself might in his quietest make with a bare bodkin. Who would. Who would fartles bear to grunt and this is the best man to grunt and sweat under a weary life. Like who would do it? Who would face this thing that is life a weary and long life full of all the struggles that we deal with. Right.
[00:11:39] But that the dread of something after death. The undiscovered country from who's born. No man returns. Epic line by Shakespeare man. Absolutely epic. The undiscovered country from who's born. No traveler returns. Right. When you're born in death. When you arrive in death. Nobody comes back to talk about it. No travel returns puzzles the will and makes us rather bear those ills we have than fly to others.
[00:12:08] We know not of a country singer distilled it said everybody wants to go to heaven. Nobody wants to go now. Right. Same same line. Same thing. Thus conscience doth make cowards of us all and thus the native hue of resolution is sick lead over with the pale cast of thought. And the enterprises of great pith and moment with the regard with this regard their currents turn awry and lose the name of action.
[00:12:35] So even even back then. As hard as life could be it was it was the unknown. The unknown side of death that that we feared right then the fact that we always have feared our mortality and better to grunt and what does he say to. Grunt and sweat under a weary life. Right.
[00:13:08] Bear bodkin and unsheathed dagger such violence. Very good hunter. Yeah. There's like I said there's an immense value in this stuff guys. It's a reminder that the the ills that we suffer right. It's just life. It's been that way forever. At least for 500 years. I want to take a look at this article and we'll get back to it.
[00:13:35] I'm going to read you some tennis and I'm going to read you some some other greats. We may do some Khalil Gibran today. I don't know he he's a lot Khalil's a lot. I mean I love Khalil Gibran don't get me wrong but he's got that weird. He was sort of the beginning in my opinion of some of the the craziest lefty thought you know like nobody's evil and nobody's bad. And that that's what always turns me off about him.
[00:14:05] I read this this morning and I got it from are you feeling lucky in our chat room so lucky thank you very much in the element chat the sort of undercover covert chat room that we have that very few know about and very few participate in. You know in comparison to all the people that watch the show you can join the element chat at prepper broadcasting dot com but it's you know it is what it is. I ran announces readiness to help victims of LA wildfires.
[00:14:38] Huh. This is from a website I've never been to before the Tehran Times like yesterday that the president of Iran was like we are not trying to assassinate Trump. And then this this comes out. This actually came out on the 11th. Iran announces readiness to help victims of the LA wildfires. They must be trying to get some billions in cash. It's all I can think in a message to Cliff Holtz the CEO of the American Red Cross.
[00:15:07] Colavan offered condolences and expressed sympathy saying widespread fires in Los Angeles which demolished houses threaten lives and turn the scenic landscape into ashes has affected the whole world. Particularly responsible and sympathetic people like like the Iranian regime. So what are they going to do. What's their plan. I can't think of a better way to smuggle in more terrorists and to bring the humanitarian aid force into the country from Iran.
[00:15:37] We're sure that by collaborating and sharing experiences we can bring a brighter future to the people who are caught in the merciless flames of fire and terminate this crisis. Yeah. I don't know man. It's weird. What's their their organization is hilarious too. It's called the Iranian Red Crescent Society. The Iranian Red Crescent Society. What is up.
[00:16:06] I don't know about that one man. Hunter says this is the only English class I didn't have trouble with. That was terrible in English dude. Terrible. Absolutely terrible. There's something about there's a disconnect there and it what it is is. It's a weird one because the teachers like the material. I think the majority of teachers like and appreciate the material.
[00:16:36] They don't focus on the material that much and they teach things that are like predetermined. You know what I mean. And then the focus on sentence structure. So I think I don't know. There's a better way to do English. I'll tell you that much. There's definitely a better way to do it. I don't know if they know how I don't know if I know how but I know that English for a guy like me should have been fun because in eighth grade. I took this book out of the library in eighth grade.
[00:17:05] This is actually another copy. My original copy is I don't even know if I have it anymore. It got eaten by my pet chinchilla in high school. But this book changed the trajectory of my life and I took it out for a number of reasons. You know what I mean being an eighth grader who was not particularly athletic. I was trying to figure out what I could do that is unique. This book was big.
[00:17:31] Poetry was becoming a thing and writing and I felt like I had to be a good idea. I had something here that was notable. You know what I mean? Like, oh, look at me. I have this big black book with with sonnets in it. You know, like I'm something you've never seen before. You know, you know how it is. We're going to read from this, but you know what? Let's do inside the cash first because I got something fun. I got something fun.
[00:17:58] I want to show you for inside the cash and it's from a new company that you're going to be hearing from. I've talked about them this week. We're linking to this product in the description and it's kind of cool. It's kind of fun. There's serious utility to it, but I want to do something that wasn't incredibly heavy on today because it is Friday and it's been a long week. And I think we're headed into one hell of a week to come. Right.
[00:18:30] It's hard to describe the home security superstore. The home security superstore is a cool little place and they got a lot of weird stuff. You know what I mean? They got a lot of weird stuff. This little shiny little pen you can get in a number of colors. Everybody should have a pen they can rely on. You know what I mean? And a pen that is worth its weight. See, for me, I keep a checklist.
[00:18:56] There's a checklist right here next to me and I have to have my checklist and I have to have my pen that can mark off my checklist. What's unique about this pen in particular is when you close the pen and go to change the ink cartridge, you gain access to... I mean, it's hard for me to call it anything but like a shiv, a shank. Right.
[00:19:24] It's a tiny one sided blade. It's not very big. It's probably about two and a half to three inches. It's definitely super sharp and has a great point on it. I wondered when I got a product like this, how come these aren't standard issue in our schools? You know what I mean? Standard issue in the schools or at least just have a few of them or have a box of them for when lockdown comes.
[00:19:53] You know, we keep our gold and our silver and our dollars behind. Armed trucks and armed men, we keep our politicians behind armed men. But if you kid brought in something like this in the school and got found out, it'd be a very big problem, even though they have no plan to protect the children whatsoever.
[00:20:15] Their plan to protect the children is to outlaw AR-15s, assuming that someone who wants to shoot up a school is always going to use an AR-15 or will be unable to get their hands on an AR-15. So this thing, this thing's cool. Right. A lot of capability. A lot of people can't bring weapons and stuff into the office, feel disarmed. And this little pen provides you, like I said, a very sharp self-defense weapon. Cool. Very cool.
[00:20:46] And it's cheap. It's like nine bucks or something. You know what I mean? The one thing about the home security superstore is they're not breaking the bank. They got really cool stuff. I'm going to tell you about this barbarian next week. You see this thing? This is this is what you need in your car. OK, and I'll show you all the features on that thing's wild. L to survive in chat. What is going on, man? We're doing English class today.
[00:21:15] I'm showing off my my poet's pen here. If you want to be sharp with the English language, this is the way to go. So so the links in the description, like I said, they've got a lot of cool solutions over there at the home security superstore. And they do a good job, man. You know, making things that don't break the bank while we got them here and while we bring it brought it up.
[00:21:42] For those of you who are looking to move out into the world, meet other preppers, meet other survivalists, people with your mind frame. L to survive at YouTube has a great video out right now highlighting the website. Prepper shows USA. All right. That's L to survive over at YouTube. And he's longtime listener member of the Prepper Broadcasting Network. Great guy. Unbelievable collection of videos and gear over there at YouTube.
[00:22:12] But what's out now and what I think everybody should take a look at is Prepper Shows USA is video on Prepper Shows USA. It's an old website. You know what I mean? You may know about it, but if you don't know about it, you should really check it out. You'll be surprised at what's being offered and what's going on in your neck of the woods. You know. What I'm supposed to do when I do inside the cash is blow my camera up so you can actually see what it is I'm showing you.
[00:22:39] And I didn't do it again. I get wrapped up and excited to show you and I forget about that piece of the puzzle. Did we did we promo enough stuff? Can we get into the book? Can we get into the doctor feel good? So this thing is. I don't know when it was written. I have no clue, but it's followed me throughout my life.
[00:23:05] This book Tennyson Browning Arnold Meredith, the guy that I fell in love with Dante Gabriel Rossetti probably won't read from him today. He's more of a Valentine's Day writer. I mean, he's got some he's got some good stuff. Um, Swineburn Hardy Hopkins Hausman to be honest after Christina Rossetti. I haven't read much. I'm a big Browning guy, big Arnold guy, big Tennyson guy, and Dante has always been my favorite. But throughout the years, man, I have.
[00:23:37] You know, I've marked things in here. Robert Browning's Abbott Vogler. He has some great. Yes, a great take on failure in here. You know, and this is another one of those things like that we exist in as people all the time, right? Success and failure, the the short celebration of success and then like the long and dark road of failure.
[00:24:05] Right. Things go well. It's like, well, things went well. Time to move on. Right. Things go bad. It's like I'm going to I'm going to beat myself up about this for about six months. And in Abbott Vogler, what is this? Stanza 11. He says, and what is our failure here but a triumph's evidence for the fullness of the days? Have we withered or agonized?
[00:24:31] Why else has the pause prolonged but that singing might issue thence? Why rush the discords in but that harmony should be prized? Why? Sorrow is hard to bear and doubt is slow to clear. Each shuffer says his say, his scheme of the wheel and woe. But God has a few of us whom he whispers in the ear.
[00:24:57] The rest may reason and welcome, tis we musicians know. That's a good one, man. That's a good one. And there's another, I think it's in this one about the prolonged chords. The song prolongs. Is that this one? That might not even be Browning. That might be Tennyson.
[00:25:19] But it's a great line about how we are all poets in our youth and for a few of us the chord is struck and prolongs. It's something you choose to give up. You know, it's something you never, a lot of people never even. Oh, you know what that is? That's the Lotus Eaters, isn't it? I think that's in the Lotus Eaters. I may not have that page marked anymore.
[00:25:50] I mark pages in books like my father with pictures. It's a cool little thing he's done. I don't know if he did it on purpose or by accident, but he's got all these old fishing books that are marked with pictures of us throughout the years. Where's the Lotus Eaters at? Anyway. The faded leaves. I don't know why this one is marked, to be honest. This must be something new I'm on.
[00:26:20] Oh, Urania is great. I've suffered. I too have suffered. Yet I know she's not cold, though she seems so. She is not cold. She is not light. But our ennoble souls lack might. She smiles and smiles and will not sigh. While we for hopeless passion die. Yet she could love. Those eyes declare. Were but men nobler than they are.
[00:26:48] Eagerly once her gracious can was turned upon the sons of men. But light the serious visage grew. She looked and smiled and saw them through. I love the line. About Urania. About her being able to love if men were more noble. I don't know. It reminds me of like. Not. Not. Modern women per se, but. There's a.
[00:27:18] Like there are women out there looking. You know what I mean for. With that in mind. You know walking this earth lonely looking for the right guy and. In a time like this it's not easy. Right. It's not easy to find. So. Should we keep going. Yeah. What the hell. Let's keep going. We have to read rugby chapel because rugby chapel is. Is so epic. It's. It's. It's. One of those things you wish you could do.
[00:27:48] And make most people never get there. In terms of like writing an amazing poem. And this one is about his father. And it's so it's so wild. I'm going to read you the opening. Because the opening is great. But. The stanza about. What is the course of life of mortal men. Is. It's so good. I mean. It's so good. I think I know it by heart. I probably don't need to read it.
[00:28:20] But it regarding a man. Regarding a father. In 1857. Right. Coldly sadly descends the autumn evening. The field strewn with its dank yellow drifts. Of withered leaves and the elms. Fade into dimness apace. Silent. Hardly a shout. From a few boys late at their play. The lights come out in the street. In the school room windows. But cold. Solemn. Unlighted. Austere.
[00:28:49] Through the gathering darkness arise. The chapel walls. In whose bound. Thou my father art laid. So his father's in the chapel dead. There thou dost lie in the gloom. Of the autumn evening. That word gloom to mind. There goes my mark. Brings thee back in the light. Of thy radiant vigor again. This is where it gets. So good. In the gloom of November we pass. Days not dark at thy side.
[00:29:19] Seasons impaired. Not the ray of the buoyant cheerfulness clear. Such thou wast and I stand in the autumn evening. And think of the bygone autumns with thee. Right. So the autumns with my father. I'm sitting here thinking about. Fifteen years have gone round since thou roses to tread in the summer morning. The road of death. At a call unforeseen sudden. For fifteen years. We who till then.
[00:29:47] In thy shade rested as under the boughs of a mighty oak. Have endured the sunshine and rain as we might. Bare unshaded alone. Lacking the shelter of thee. That is that is one of the best lines about a dad. In other words. He's saying like. And while you were alive. We didn't bear. The unrelenting sunshine and rain because you were like a mighty oak that stood over us.
[00:30:17] Right and protected us with the shade and the. Yeah. That's powerful man. And the poem goes on and sort of gravitates away from dad and into sort of the more. You know what it is to be a man in general. It says what is the course of the life of mortal men on the earth. Right. Right. So. Just a simple question. What is the course of the life of mortal men on earth.
[00:30:47] Most men Eddie about here and there. Eat and drink. Chatter and love and hate. Gather and squander. Are raised aloft and hurled. In the dust. Striving blindly achieving nothing. And then they die. Perish. And no one asks who or what they have been. More than he asks what waves in the moonlit solitudes mild. Of the midmost ocean have swelled.
[00:31:17] Foamed for a moment and gone. The course of life for mortal men. Myself included. Right. What he's saying there is like. You're going to live a. You're going to live a life. Most people are going to live a life where it's like. He compares the average man's life to a wave in the middle of the ocean.
[00:31:47] Sort of like if a tree falls. And no one's there to hear it doesn't make a sound. You know that old concept. He compares the average man's life to that. Just a. Just a wave in the middle of the ocean that foam that rises foams and disappears. And no one knows it happened. No one cares that it happened. No one. You know what I mean. And he goes on after that to talk about the. The the precious few who. Are driven to to. Leave legacy fundamentally.
[00:32:17] And it's really good man. It's really good. I'm going on and on today. I. I have some things to tell you about. I'm supposed to tell you about actually we'll just do this on the outro. We'll do this on the outro because I'm not in a mood for promotion today whatsoever. Okay. And that's just what it is. That's just what it is. So we'll do this sort of like an outro promo, you know.
[00:32:49] Pardon me. Hunter SF says I remember being the only one in class chuckling in the back when no one was. No one was embarrassing. I'm not sure I know what that means. Hunter. Go back to the to the greats folks or go to the greats to begin with. And if you want me to write something up to sort of guide you through that kind of thing. Let me know.
[00:33:18] You know I can push you in the direction of things that I think you will like. It's hard you get a book like the one I just showed you. It's like what am I supposed to read. Where do I start. You know what I mean. I could put a list if you're really interested in it. If you're really interested in understanding and getting back to that. This is like a piece of what it is that you can't draw the circle of human life and take out art and poetry and writing. I mean you can but there's a hole now. You know what I mean. There's a hole in the track.
[00:33:48] And you'll miss it. You know until you find it. I want to tell you guys about our. This is really like research and development right now. But I think it's very cool. So. Hell to survive says that most of the poetry I know starts with either there once was a man from Nantucket or roses are red and vials are blue. I'm telling you look I could put you on to some stuff. You know it's not it's.
[00:34:20] This day and age there's so much distraction and there's so much easy pleasure that. It's hard to sit down and read it's hard to sit down and read through something and scour it for things that are. Well we'll see you scour it for things that really resonate with you but you also. You also read it for you know like I said that connection to what the fact that we are the same primarily. And you get this you get strength from that.
[00:34:51] But I want to tell you about factor X again today. This is a very cool EMP proof backpack with CCW capability that is in production basically in the R&D phase right now. And I met I met Ornan from factor X on X funny enough. And he's a good guy. And he's taking a lot of technology from a variety of.
[00:35:19] EMP proofing RFID security protection that kind of stuff a lot of those ideas and refining them to create a really high level backpack. And what he's doing for us he's created a home page. Let me get it right. Factor X equipment dot com slash PBN. Factor X equipment dot com slash PBN. And what he's got going on is the ability to register to get more information about the bag as it goes on.
[00:35:49] And you know here's the thing I'm learning. This is where the real benefits come in to getting involved with somebody like this. What I'm learning about these smaller businesses you know this is not like this is not like. I can't think of the brand now 511 gear right like you email 511 gear and say I really like the new bag you're putting out. What I would do is blank and they're going to go great delete. You know what I mean.
[00:36:19] What I'm realizing is there's a lot of entrepreneurial. There's a lot of entrepreneurs out there who are doing things like this. Who are not only looking to build an audience for a product that will be launched which is what's going on here. They're also looking for input. You know so if you're out there watching this listening to this. And you're and you're saying to yourself like. What what would I do if I were creating a bag like this.
[00:36:47] I guarantee you if you reach out with comments to Ornan. He's going to he's going to you know he's the guy. It's it's a one man operation at the moment. Well maybe not a one man operation. But you know he's making the decisions. And he'll have the ability to say this is something I would do. And I like this idea. Or maybe I don't like the idea. But you will have a voice. You know what I mean. And that that goes a long way. I hope you know that that goes along. So check it out. FactorXEquipment.com slash PBN.
[00:37:17] And like I said just register. If you're interested in the bag. Go to the website. You'll see all kinds of stuff about the bag right. What it has going on. Comfort ergonomics. Easy access. Signal blocking capabilities. Aesthetics. Discrete use. It's good stuff. The bag itself is beautiful. You can see it. I'll show you one last time. And then I got to get out of here. We hanging out too long. Right.
[00:37:47] So it doesn't have the. It's got more of the gray man look. It's not all tactical. Which is always good. If it's your thing. You know. If you're into that kind of stuff. It's something that. I have some SLNT products. That I'm really into. I do not have a full scale Faraday backpack. I think as technology increases. It probably will be a thing. That most people will have. Right.
[00:38:17] Just from the sheer like. Hackability of everything. So yeah. Check them out. I hope you enjoyed the show today folks. It was definitely off. The beaten path. But sometimes you got to slow down man. Sometimes you got to slow it down. You got to be like. Okay. Take a breath. What's going on. What are my. You know. And I could have done the whole show on the Bible. We could have done the Bible. If the Bible is your. Poetry of choice. And that's fine too.
[00:38:48] But it's. You know. I bring a little piece of me. That you don't often see. To the show today. As an option for you to. Go into these places. Maybe you haven't gone. Or don't go. Or never have gone. I never assumed you would go. And. Find some relief from everything. You know. Find some. Something beautiful for a little while. Because life's all about. Going places you've never gone. I'm telling you right now. Right. Passion. So.
[00:39:18] I think that's it. I'm out of here folks. I do appreciate you. I have a feeling. We'll be around on the weekends. With a variety of things. J. Ferg will be live. Saturday morning. Carl B. Will be live in two. Or will be. On air in two hours. We've got a great comms. Prepper tip of the day. Coming up from chin. Look out for that. I may release that today. See how the day goes. But yeah man. It's. It's a lot going on. It's a heavy time. Make sure you get your.
[00:39:48] Get your head together. You can lose your way. In moments like these. And we are just getting started. Alright. I'll talk to you guys soon. See ya. You're listening here. To PBN. You will pay us back the stability here. Theçeemok Thank you.
