Shawn Ryan Show - Mike Glover: "It Was a Good Run Killing a Bunch of Bad Guys" | Peak Points
Episode Date: November 21, 2024This episode kicks off the Shawn Ryan Show's "Peak Points" series, where we highlight the most impactful moments from previous releases. We're starting at the very beginning with Episode #01, featurin...g former Green Beret and CIA contractor Mike Glover. For longtime listeners, this segment is a great way to revisit a Hall of Fame episode. And if you're new to the show, it's the perfect starting point to get a quick glimpse of this incredible story. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://patreon.com/vigilanceelite https://shawnryanshow.com/newsletter Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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He got out September 3rd, 2001.
A week later, September 11th happens.
We immediately deployed to Afghanistan.
So I was in charge of all of them.
As a new guy.
And they didn't want to be the guy that failed their mission
and got an American killed.
Had a catastrophic failure and crashed a $100 million
helicopter, MH-47.
Our guys didn't even have uniforms.
What did you think of working with the SEALs?
It was a good run of killing a whole bunch of bad guys.
A week later, Benghazi happens.
The number one priority for me is...
I've been dying to ask you this question.
You got out September 3rd, 2001.
A week later, September 11th happens, the towers go down.
What is the first thing that went through your head?
Knowing your primary mission was or your primary goal was to become a Green Beret in special
operations, kicking fucking doors in, going to combat,
that whole lifestyle,
and then you immediately know we're at war.
Yeah, it was a-
And you're not in it.
The biggest kick in the balls that I've ever had,
because, I mean, backing up a little bit,
I had the option to re-enlist.
Obviously, I was on retention's radar for like,
hey, this guy's an airborne ranger qualified dude.
He's an E-5.
I made sergeant when I was 20 years old.
And so I was a team leader in the infantry,
had good NCOERs.
And so it's like, hey man, this guy's a good guy
we want to keep in the military.
But I told them that I want
sniper school and I want halo school en route to 18th Airborne Corps LURS or long-range
reconnaissance or ranger battalion. And I was adamant about that. I actually went into a
sergeant major's office who was the military district of Washington. So he's a Command Sergeant Major.
He knew my uncle.
And he said, Mike, what can I give you to stay in?
I said, this is the things that I want.
And he goes, which I found out later is true,
Halo or Free Fall School is not a reenlistment option.
And it's not.
Back then, you didn't have a lot of incentive
for staying in, so they used to give you schools to stay in.
And I said, Sergeant Major, well,
we can make it an option, right?
That's because that's what I want.
He's like, Mike, I can't do that for you.
I mean, I'll call and I'll try.
And he did, but it's not an option.
So a CSM even can't make it an option.
And so I said, okay, that's my,
I gave the options on the table
and they decided not to facilitate what I wanted as a dream.
And so I decided to get out.
I had a buddy who reenlisted with me
that I went to Ranger school with,
or reenlisted without me,
and he went to third Ranger battalion.
He jumped into Afghanistan on October 19th, 2001.
Son of a bitch.
And so the moment it happened, I was actually in college
and I had gotten out of the military obviously,
but I had transitioned into the National Guard component.
Okay.
So I'm sitting in a child hall
at Fayetteville Technical Community College,
getting my associate's degree so I could further
my education and saw the events happen.
I did some crazy shit, man.
I immediately started making phone calls.
I went home, I packed a duffel bag of my equipment.
I threw my battle dress uniforms, my camo uniforms,
in the washer and then dried them
and was making calls like, what are we doing here?
What's happening?
And I was at the time, I was in 30th heavy armor
separate brigade and I was in the scout platoon
and I was a team leader.
So I had a little minuscule position
that could affect something,
but I knew we were going to war.
So I had a choice to make, which was real real easy which was I'm going back in the fucking military
Yeah, so on September 12th like 0 9 in the morning. I'm making phone calls to get back in
I mean that had to be like
At the exact same time that's happening to completely separate emotions one
You know tragedy we've just been attacked and a and that's happening two completely separate emotions. One, you know, tragedy.
We'd just been attacked and a lot of people died.
On the other hand, you know what comes after
and everything you've ever wanted to do
since you said you were 10 years old becomes a reality
and you're not there.
I mean, that had to be, was one more overpowering than the other? becomes a reality and you're not there.
I mean, that had to be,
was one more overpowering than the other?
Yeah, it was, I mean, I felt for the people, obviously,
but I knew that I was in a unique position
to make a difference in the fight
because I was an NCO.
I mean, I was a non-commissioned officer
and I knew that there was an opportunity for me to get in the military and
Fight and get some vengeance and that's what I wanted to do
I joined the army to fight mm-hmm the reason I got out because there was no fight to be had if there was a war
There was something going on. I would have been in it. Yeah
You know, I think
something important to note
is the biological instinct in men,
most men, the men I associate with, to fight.
I mean, it's to fight each other in training,
because that's what we do as kids.
We fight and we grow up in those environments
where we're displaying our masculinity
and there's a whole bunch of psychological
and physiological things that are associated with that.
And I don't think we grow out of that.
We grow up and we wanna fight and defend.
That's what men do.
And so it definitely was part of my character and my DNA.
And I don't think it was fake. I think it was something very real So it definitely was part of my character and my DNA.
And I don't think it was fake. I think it was something very real and I wanted to fight.
So I had to go back in.
How'd you get back in?
It was a battle,
because the army didn't really know how to handle
a whole bunch of dudes who were prior service guys
that wanted to go back in.
Was there a lot of guys that wanted to go back?
Oh yeah, there was a lot of guys.
There in that time period, a lot of people who were prior service who had gotten out,
I mean even older guys who had gotten out, wanted to come back in and serve. So I had
to go through the whole process again, which was... Holy shit. I had to go through MEPs,
you know, as an E5, going back through MEPs, you know, the whole duck walk thing, all that stuff.
I had to go back through all that to get back in.
And they had a program which is kind of similar to what's called 18X right now,
where you can come in off the streets and try out for selection.
And if you make it, they'll send you to Special Forces Training.
And if you don't, you simply just go back to your sister unit or if you don't you simply just go back to your sister
unit or if you don't have a unit, whatever your job is, they'll find a job for you in
that position.
Now how old are you at this point?
At this point I'm 21 years old.
You're 21 years old.
You just saw the towers come down and the only thing on your mind is I gotta fucking
get back in there. Yep. And the only thing on your mind is I got a fucking get back in there
Yep, no shit. I mean, yeah
Wow, that's I mean that's
That's a lot of courage I was young when I hit the ground
I mean I was running we immediately deployed to Afghanistan. How many guys are on your team roughly?
Well, I think at that time maybe 10.
10 dudes?
Yeah, most attachments are light by nature of guys coming and going.
And like I said, my 18 Bravo senior was in surgery, so he had to get a surgery to recover.
And so we deployed that year to Afghanistan
with a little bit of a light package.
What year?
This was 05, early 05.
So that's a hot year.
Yeah.
Now are you doing, are you running Indig?
Yeah, part of the job is running Indig.
I mean, when I reported
as an 18 Bravo I was in charge of about 144 Afghan commandos. Holy shit so
there are 10 guys, there's 10 SF guys running a hundred and forty four man
army. Yeah and basically I was the commander of them so I was in charge of
all of them. As a new guy. As a new guy. Holy shit.
I'll never forget he said,
hey, your guys are formed up waiting on you.
Waiting on me.
Yeah, you're the 18 Bravo,
get out there and be their commander.
Because everybody else had other stuff to worry about.
You know, I mean, the 18 Charlies had to run the Firebase,
which is a full-time job of the you know base
security and the actual physical structure the generators the water system
everything the combo base defense the combo guys are living conditions like
shit I mean tents living on a cot living on a cot surrounded by stacked sandbags
and a concrete-ish, just mud hut
on the second floor of a little structure.
So you're way the fuck out there at your own fire base.
There's no PX.
Nothing.
There's no chow hall.
Nothing.
None of that shit.
Are you eating local food? A lot of the time time we were or my or MRE. I mean we were the furthest northern
Firebase on the on the border with Pakistan
and we had
Really not a lot of support. I mean the closest
Support was j-bad, which is still hours away.
I mean, if something went bad. So how trained up, you show up in country,
you're now the commander of 144 Afghan force.
How well were they trained?
Did you guys, was there like a changeover
from another team, or are you starting from scratch?
Now, some of them were trained up by prior ODAs.
I think first group was there before us.
Before that, there was another third group team.
And so they had a little bit of training,
but that's, I mean, man, when you're talking about
Afghans in a rural province of Afghanistan
that have no education, have no aptitude, don't know how to read, write, yeah, I mean
it's all relative.
I'm getting a little ahead of myself, but I'm assuming the first thing you want to do
is figure out what they're actually capable of doing.
Yeah, you have to, no matter what the condition or the situation when you come into a new Firebase
or fall into new Endage, you gotta vet them.
You gotta put them through some kind of process
to be able to see what their current capability is.
We did that, it wasn't much
So we started from scratch Wow, we were doing small unit tactics every single day
I was doing small unit tactics with them every single day that we weren't operating and
This would be the force
Not only this is before
Afghan commando units Afghan border police
Afghan Afghan Commando Units, Afghan Border Police,
Afghan National Police, this is before all that. So they didn't have a job.
Their job for us were, they were Afghan Commandos
working for Special Forces guys.
We paid them directly cash.
So these were our first line of defense and QRF
if anything went wrong. So you show up in country, you got to get to know these guys, you got to train them, you got to figure out what their capabilities are, you got to improve those.
How long do you have before boots on the ground, first operation? First operation. Well, I mean, again, that's relative as well because when you
infill into a remote firebase, the one we were at in the middle of nowhere was
surrounded by high ground. It was just a couple Americans in the middle of the
Wild West. So we were getting rocketed, we were getting reports of attacks
and all these things that were happening.
So we were in it, we were in the thick of it already.
But I mean, we didn't have any time, it was immediate.
I think we went on an op two days, three days
after we hit the ground.
Immediately went and did a link up with one of the,
you know the Afghan seniors
or Afghan elders in a village. And that's a movement to contact.
I mean, you're just rolling,
hoping you're not gonna get blown up,
hoping you're not gonna get in a tick
with the guys that you haven't vetted yet.
Holy shit.
We're talking two fucking days.
Two days.
And you're out the door with them on of movement. Yeah, we had no choice
How did that go?
It went uneventful. We had activity
But nothing significant happened
Luckily for us and we just started building
More rapport with them vetting them training them and it improved our situation over time
So you're out you meet the village elder you come back you debrief vetting them, training them, and it improved our situation over time.
So you're out, you meet the village elder, you come back, you debrief.
Are you happy with what you've just been handed with the 144 guys,
or are you going, holy shit, we have got a lot of work to do?
No, I will say, here's just a little bit of forward history on the guys that I trained.
Those same guys that I trained had worked with special operations,
including special missions unit from the Navy prior to working with us.
So there were some good dudes.
And when I left that fire base, a guy by the name of Rob Miller ripped into that firebase and was with those guys
as an 18 Bravo from 3rd Special Forces Group when he was killed and earned the Medal of Honor,
posthumously of course. And those men, those Afghans that were with them were the Afghans
that I trained that were trained prior. And so they were squared away.
I mean, they had heart, they were disciplined.
They wanted it, man.
They were impressed with them.
Yeah, I was impressed.
A good example was they instinctively knew when,
or if there was a potential significant act
gonna happen called SIG Act,
and they would immediately get to the high ground
and they were good about displacing themselves
and then talking to the local community
because you have to understand that these people lived
in that same community.
So they knew everybody around them
and they didn't want to be the guy
that failed their mission and got an American killed.
So they had buy-in.
So yeah, I was impressed with them.
We had a lot of work to do obviously,
but they had a good base and all the guys
in Nuristan province that I operated with that were Afghan,
in the village of Nurey and Asadabad and Barakout, all great men.
What are these guys carrying? Do they have nods? Do they have helmets?
At this time in the war, no nods, no helmet. We eventually evolved into that,
but we were straight AK-47s and flip-flops.
Oh man.
I mean, it was, our guys didn't even have uniforms.
They were rolling around in whatever we can get them.
I actually exploited a program that was a nonprofit
that was providing clothes and toiletry items
to soldiers overseas and got this nonprofit
to send me helicopters full of equipment to be able
to outfit my Afghans with just clothes, with just toothbrushes, because they
didn't have it and we weren't paying for it so they needed stuff. I mean it's so
funny seeing these these dudes running around with Harley-Davidson shirts and
flannel jackets and USA ball caps.
But we had to do what we had to do.
You finished that deployment, you come home, what's next?
I get back from that deployment and Iraq was getting bad and I wanted to go to school.
So I went to put my name in the hat to go to SAFAR-TEC, which
is Special Forces Advanced Reconnaissance Target Acquisition Interdiction Exploitation,
a whole bunch of words and an acronym that doesn't even look right.
It's SAFAR-TAIC, whatever.
People call it SAFAR-TEC, and it's our CQB advanced schoolhouse for
Haas's rescue for direct action for vehicle interdiction. We learn all that
stuff there. It's a I believe an eight week school maybe nine weeks so it's
pretty long and it it is the minimum qualification that you need to serve in
a commander's and extremist force which there's one of those per group, which is a
reinforced company that's
designed to conduct Haas's rescue and
crisis response across the world. How much CQB do you have? What's your background in CQB before you show up to that school?
What is the basic
kind of mold for an SF guy? Usually at the team
level you learn in it's called Sephalic you learn basic CQB sometimes it's strong wall
I think at that time it was probably strong wall real basic CQB you don't learn points
of domination you don't learn Haas' rescue considerations.
Maybe a little bit, but there's not a lot of it.
Okay.
So, at the basic team level,
if you don't have a Sephardic qualified guy,
you might not know a lot.
You might think you know a lot, but you really don't.
And I thought I knew a lot, but I didn't know anything.
I showed up and didn't know shit about CQB until I got there.
I knew how to shoot.
I was a decent shooter with pistol and carbine,
but I didn't know much.
After that school, let's fast forward to the next deployment.
Did you utilize that a lot, or was it back to what you were
going before?
No, it was, in fact, I was in Charlie Company,
2nd Battalion, the CIF was Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion.
One company designated per group,
so they were right next door.
So I used to see those dudes come in,
and they had longer hair, they had cooler uniforms,
they had better guns, and I wanted to be in the CIF.
At that time, you had to have two years team time
to even think about going in the CIF. At that time, you had to have two years team time to even think about going in the CIF.
But I had real good rapport with my company's SART major,
and he went next door to take the CIF.
So he was my SART major, he became the CIF SART major,
and long story short, I wasn't supposed to go to CIF
as a new guy with only a year or some change on the team,
but I went to Sephardic and came recommended out of Sephardic.
And so they pulled me over.
I mean, I wasn't supposed to deploy to Afghanistan for another year.
But I went next door and I was in Iraq a month later.
I mean, out of Sephardic, from that trip I came back, I went straight to Sephardic, which
is two months.
I had 30 days and I was straight back in Iraq.
So you did a nine month deployment,
come back for roughly 90 days.
Yeah.
Two months of that is.
It's training.
Becoming an assaulter at the highest level
and then you redeploy.
Yep, redeployed in Iraq for counter-terrorism mission,
which is all CQB.
Did you have any, were you married at the time?
At the time I was married, but I was married young and didn't, I mean, to be honest.
Came secondary to the mission.
Absolutely secondary to the mission.
We barely knew each other.
I mean, on the ground I had a couple months with her.
So it was turning and burning.
In fact, I had a hasty marriage
because I saw some dudes get killed our trip.
I was part of Operation Red Wing that trip
and we had a couple other Chinooks that were down.
We had guys that we lost in the company.
So it was a bad trip.
It was a bad year.
A lot of Americans were killed that year.
That's a fucking small world, you know?
The fact that you were there,
I came there right after that,
which means we were there at the same time,
and as we talked a couple days ago,
you met my fucking best friend who just passed away.
Yeah.
It's fucking crazy.
You know how small the world is.
It is crazy, it is a small world, man.
So you did utilize, sorry, sidetracked there,
but so you did utilize that school on that next deployment.
Every operation.
Oh, shit.
I explosively breached every other target
every other night.
We went out every night, sometimes twice a night, going after bad guys.
And it was a real active campaign.
It was us and I believe SEAL Team 8, and we did joint ops,
where it was like two SIF guys and five SEALs.
And we went out with our Indige and conducted counter-terrorism missions. What do you think of working with the seals?
My first impression of them weren't great because we had a few interactions with them where I never forget
You know at the time I was believe still in e6. I hadn't made e7 yet, but I had
combat rotation behind me and I was on my second deployment
and had been in training for years, had been in the military and the infantry, and so I
had a background.
I'll never forget one of the young Sills being told by one of my guys who was a senior
guy, oh my god, I was the most junior guy in the CIF.
A CIF, a Commander's and Extremist Forces, filled with the most senior guys in the group.
I think my detachment years later,
everybody made Master Sergeant the same time.
Like an entire senior team with guys
with multiple deployments.
I had the least amount of combat.
Guys on average had three or four rotations,
and this is early GWAT.
He said, hey, maybe you should hang out with these guys
because we could do some cross training
and maybe teach you guys some things.
And he said, what could your guys possibly teach mine?
You gotta be shitting me.
He said that.
And I was humbled to the fact that a lot of my own guys
were so senior and already legends in the community. There was already stories about them. So I paid attention.
And we had a lot of experiences like that with the young SEALs, but a lot of them weren't.
I mean, Jeremy Wise, who eventually went to work for the CIA and he was killed unfortunately in a suicide bombing.
He was there, he was great.
A couple guys that are now in other special missions units
were working with me and they were great.
So I didn't have a horrible experience,
but it was different.
I mean a young SEAL coming out of training,
21, 22,
and even at that time I was 26 at the time.
So it was different, but we got along good.
I mean we didn't have problems with operating with them,
and we had a lot of action,
and we had a lot of fun that rotation.
What is your next assignment?
So you're at the third
group, you go to the CIF, what comes next? Another rotation in the
CIF, I mean the CIF is a grind. I did three CIF rotations to Iraq back to
back, going to war coming back, going to war coming back, going to war, coming back, going to war, coming back, going to war, coming back. I eventually moved up into reconnaissance
in special operations and became a sniper,
went to sniper school, went to free fall school,
and started specializing my efforts on the long gun.
So between unilateral operations,
which is working with task force, the joint task force,
I think at the time we were working with Tom D. Tomaso,
who's a famous Black Hawk Down Baton leader,
and he was a special missions unit commander.
We operated under him and under task force 16,
which is Stanley McChrystal's big,
kill capture conglomerate of the best units in the world. We were part of that effort when we went out
and crushed bad guys for years.
I mean, it was a good run of killing a whole bunch of bad guys.
So I did that for three rotations in a row.
You've got a hell of a career, man.
Yeah, thanks, man.
So you leave there and then...
So I leave and start grinding to build up this unit,
hire and fire a couple guys,
and build up a skillset for special reconnaissance
in the continent of Africa to be able to respond to crisis
that potentially happened. And there was no, there was no at the time organization that was
covering down on Africa because it used to be third groups responsibility but
because of the war we had a change in hands and change in responsibility.
So we stood it up.
It was a grind.
We got validated by special operations command.
And that was ironically enough, September 1st of 2012,
we got validated.
And a week later,
or September 11th, Benghazi happens.
I had already been notified prior to Benghazi happening
that my team and myself was gonna be the first guys
into Libya to run what's called a 12-8 program,
which is a congressionally mandated counter-terrorism
program to counter al-Qaeda,
which therein lies the benny, therein lies the point, which is before September 11,
2012, I had already been identified, we're going to go in there, stand up a counter-terrorism force to counter al-Qaeda. So it's often been said that, hey, oh, there was no threats there.
There was threats, there was bombings, there were shootings, there was attacks on the UN,
foreign nationals, embassy staff.
So I was getting all those intel sit reps before that happened. And then obviously
that happened and it changed everything.
Where were you when that happened?
Ironically enough, I was back in a special missions units compound doing a cross talk
brief with basically a key leader engagement with the team lead from team Libya that had been designated
and me and the other guy from my unit
because we were former unit members of that unit,
we were there doing a crosstalk.
I'll never forget, I went there and met up with the J-3
which was at the time a Colonel, and he told me
last night, this just happened and this is what's going on.
And so I stayed an extra few days to assess the situation and to get tied in because at
that point, it was my unit's responsibility to react and respond
outside of obviously the primary main effort,
that unit that I was in's responsibility
of responding to that crisis.
So was this happening, was Benghazi happening real time
when you found out?
Yes, yeah, it was happening real time.
It was still active and it was still happening and I was watching on ISR things
unfolding Jesus Christ. Yeah
Is this what ultimately led you to separate
Yeah, so that's exactly right long story short I deployed to Libya soon after that and
stood up a 1208 program.
And we had all the right things done
to go after the guys that were responsible
for the killing of the four personnel
that were killed in Benghazi.
You know, Ambassador Stevens, Smith,
and then Glenn Doherty and Tyrone Woods.
So, we went there, I was deployed there for over six months.
I busted my ass and tried everything I could
to kill or capture those guys
with obviously other special operations units
that were there. And other, one other special operations units that were there.
And other, one other special operation unit that was there.
And we offered up a full platter.
Kill capture, bilateral mission, unilateral mission,
whatever you want, we'll do.
And we were told that the political climate
wouldn't allow for it, so we're not gonna do anything.
And so, let's just say I was disgruntled when I came back.
I had a Lieutenant Colonel that I was co-located with
that was a reserve officer from AFRICOM,
who was a fucking piece of shit,
who was drinking every night, getting drunk,
who didn't give a fuck about the mission,
who was making excuses every single day
about not wanting to work, not wanting to do the op.
And so when I get back, I said, go fuck yourself.
God, are you serious?
Yeah.
You know, I know how fucking tough that can be.
I mean, I didn't watch, we didn't have Pred Feed
or anything like that, but to watch an event going down,
I mean, that's one of the most,
when you know you can fucking help, that's one of the most, when you know you can fucking help,
it's one of the most helpless feelings in the fucking world
and I've experienced that as well.
We were working with a foreign counterpart
and should have been on that fucking up,
but we weren't and their helos went down
and we listened to the entire thing on the fucking radio and then we saw them
when they got back and I mean,
and the event that you had to stay on the sideline for
is, I mean, I could see how you could be that disgruntled.
I mean, you got out with 18 fucking years then, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Two years to retirement.
Yep, yeah.
I got back, I did get recruited by the CIA at the time.
They recruited me for a job.
And I had finished my college degree, my bachelor's degree,
the year prior to that.
So that was a prerequisite to become a staffer for them.
I came back with the anticipation of doing that job,
but the sequester happened, which was a stop loss on all,
or a hiring freeze on all jobs.
So I wasn't able to do that job,
which kind of fucked me up, you know.
I was prepared to do that.
So I transitioned off active duty and then went into the National Guard component where
I took a team in Texas, a 19th Special Forces group, and was just waiting on the word.
In fieldcraft, it seems like you guys do a lot of prepping and are masters of it.
And I don't know about you, but a lot of the clients that I've had think that there might
be something they need to prepare for.
They think something might happen, not necessarily the end of the world, but they just want to
be ready in case of a natural disaster, an EFP.
There's a thousand different scenarios.
What would you say for somebody that's completely green,
they don't know how to shoot, they don't own a gun,
they don't have food storage, anything,
what would you say the number one priority would be?
Where do they start?
anything, what would you say the number one priority would be? Where do they start? The number one priority for me is personal defense because the first principle of patrolling
is security. And if you can't secure yourself, you can't secure your family. You can't defend your life,
you can't defend your family's life.
So I would say it starts with a personal decision
to buy a firearm, learn how to utilize a firearm,
and carry that firearm daily.
What firearm would you suggest,
starting with pistol or rifle?
I think universally, you know,
I carry different guns for different reasons,
but universally
a Glock 19 is probably the staple concealed carry pistol.
In contracting we carry Glock 17s typically, but Glock 19s is the right frame size for
most, it's the right size frame for concealment, It has the most accessories per gun in the industry.
It's a good platform.
It's reasonably priced.
And I've used a Glock 19 when the military got them
in special operations.
And I've seen them throughout my military career
and I've never seen one fail.
So a single action only Glock 19 is the start point.
I would definitely agree with that.
It's like the Toyota Corolla of handguns.
Yeah, absolutely.
They just never fucking die.
Yeah, 100%.
And then, so next would be,
And so next would be, so you would say pistol and then move on to rifle? No, the next priority for me is med.
Med?
Med, absolutely.
30,000 people a year die in vehicle accidents.
I wonder how many of those could have been prevented.
I mean, 400 idiots a year follow their tree stands and hunting and break their legs and do dumb shit.
So we're prone to accidents, we're prone to trauma,
and I've treated trauma in real life,
I've saved people's lives with tourniquets.
Tourniquet, which is a $29.99 piece of equipment
from North American Rescue, which we sell on our website
at fieldcrowsurvival.com, is the number one piece of equipment in med that you need to carry. Stopping an extremity wound,
a traumatic bleed from a femoral or brachial artery is life-saving. If you don't do that,
you simply just go to sleep and die. Are you guys teaching meds? We absolutely do. Yeah, we teach T triple C tactical combat casualty care
Which we were required by our contract to train we teach a course certified T triple C course
through NA EMT this the
Certification on
Tactical med training trauma training. I just taught a CPR lifesaver course at my
training, trauma training. I just taught a CPR lifesaver course at my Tribe Expo recently. So we frequently teach med and I expect that if in contracting and
austere environments we are required to carry a tourniquet based on our own
understanding of what we could run into that a civilian should do the same.
Whether that's in your inside your waistband,
because we do sell inside the waistband tourniquet holder,
or that's inside of a bag or inside your vehicle,
somewhere within arm's reach,
where if you're experiencing trauma,
you could save your life.
Interesting.
So number three, what would the number three thing be?
We got pistol, we got med.
If we're talking about equipment specific things
that you need to carry,
the next piece of equipment would be the way
in which you carry it, which would be the bag
in which you carry.
A lot of people don't think about it,
but the extension of your capability
of what you can carry on your person is limited.
You can only fit so much shit in your pockets and your pants.
And if you have a bag, meaning an everyday carry bag,
that might be your purse, your Merce,
your European man satchel.
It sets you up for an extended capacity.
That's how we look at vehicles.
I mean, if I have a med kit in my back pocket
that's a minimalist, you know, low-vis med kit,
well, I want my fucking car to be an ambulance.
I want there to be enough med equipment
to treat my family, myself,
and then you upgrade that to your house as well.
I want a damn hospital at my house.
So having the ability to carry all their stuff
is super important, and in that bag,
I would definitely include a survival kit,
a modern survival kit that has the staples of survival,
including the ability to contain water,
purify water, start a fire, signal,
communicate potentially, sat, iridium, VHF, UHF,
the list goes on.
Gummy bears.
Gummy bears that are fat free,
that have lots of carbs, lots of sugars, lots of calories,
they're survival bears, is what we call them.
They're survival bears.
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