21JAN2024, Texas Air National Guard deploys the Modular Mobile Surveillance System, or M2S2, surveillance system:
Army Aviation Support Facility-1, Salem, Oregon, 19JAN 2024. Oregon National Guard photo by John Hughel.
On 19JAN2024, the Oregon Army National Guard’s Detachment 1- Company Alpha-1st Battalion–112th Aviation returned home from a 12 months deployment with other National Guard personnel from Idaho, North Dakota, Montana and Wisconsin, in helping to patrol the Texas/Mexico border. The unit used UH-72 Lakota helicopters to conduct 385 missions during the day and at night, accumulating more than 1-thousand-825 flight hours patrolling the Rio Grande Valley and Laredo sectors. Video of demobilization ceremony by Major Wayne Clyne:
Oregon Captain explains the use of the UH-72 Lakota in assisting the federal Customs & Border Protection (aka Border Patrol) in Texas, video interview by Major Wayne Clyne:
14JAN2024, Operation Lone Star video update (edited by Private Second Class Steven Day) showing command post operations in Eagle Pass:
This is a 09JAN2024, Texas National Guard-Operation Lone Star video update (edited by Private Second Class Steven Day), revealing that illegals (including known criminals) have been trained in anti-tracking tactics:
This is a 04JAN2024, Texas National Guard-Operation Lone Star video update, edited by Private Second Class Steven Day:
Texas National Guard supporting Operation Lone Star along the Texas-Mexico border surpassed one million ‘events’ in 2023. Video report by Private Second Class Steven Day:
Incomplete list of National Guard deployments/incidents for January 2024.
On 07JAN2024, Georgia Army National Guard’s 161st Military History Detachment officially said good-bye as they prep to deploy to The Middle East, to document the escalation! Video interview by Staff Sergeant Rydell Tomas:
On 11JAN2024, Oklahoma Army National Guard’s Charlie Company-1st Battalion (Assault Helicopter Battalion)-244th Aviation Regiment-90th Troop Command is training on Fort Hood (now officially called Fort Cavazos), Texas, for deployment to Kosovo, to support the larger deployment of Georgia Army National Guard’s 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team. Video interview by Staff Sergeant Reece Heck:
Springfield, Ohio, 12JAN2024. Ohio Army National Guard photo by Specialist Olivia Lauer.
Despite the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment-separation of church and state, on 12JAN2024 the Ohio Army National Guard held a deployment ceremony in the First Christian Church, for the deployment of their 1137th Signal Company. The 1137th will provide installation, recovery, repair and maintenance of telecommunications networks in The Middle East.
On 14JAN2024, more than 1-thousand-8-hundred militia personnel with New Jersey Army National Guard’s 102nd Cavalry Regiment-44th Infantry Brigade Combat Team deployed for The Middle East. Video by Specialist Michael Hayes:
On 17JAN2024, personnel with Washington DC’s Air National Guard deployed for The Middle East. Video by Master Sergeant Arthur M. Wright:
Video by Sergeant First Class Whitney Hughes, 19JAN2024, showing deployment training for Army National Guard units from Iowa, Louisiana and Oklahoma, undergoing training to take part in the larger deployment of Georgia Army National Guard’s 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team to Kosovo in NATO-Europe:
Arizona Army National Guard Captain Erin Hannigan, 21JAN2024.
On 21JAN2024, more than 150 militia personnel with Arizona Army National Guard’s 856th Military Police Company conducted a deployment ceremony on Bushmaster Field in Phoenix. The unit is deploying to The Middle East.
Arizona Army National Guard Captain Erin Hannigan, 21JAN2024.
About 1-hundred Airmen and their KC-135R Stratotanker, with Iowa Air National Guard’s 185th Air Refueling Wing, deployed for assignment on Andersen Air Force Base, Guam. Video by Senior Master Sergeant Vincent De Groot, 24JAN2024:
The Arizona Army National Guard deployed a unit to The Middle East in February 2023. Note in the TV report the famous-last-words stated several times; “We hope they have fun.” :
A vaccine that was created during the Cold War in 1984-87, yet took decades before its first small scale use in 2019, is now mandatory in the African country of Cameroon: “RTS,S vaccine was created in 1987 as part of a collaboration between GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) that began in 1984.”–RTS,S/AS01 vaccine (Mosquirix™): an overview
A U.S. Army Africa Command surgeon identifies mosquito species with the Deputy Superintendent of Ghana Police, at the Africa Malaria Task Force conference, 18JUL2023. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer Second Class Haydn Smith.
By the way, the United Nations’ (UN) World Health Organization (WHO) boasted that by October 2023 that ‘small scale use’ pilot program (which also included another malaria vax known as R21) had been used to vaccinate at least 2-million children in Ghana, Kenya and Malawi!
AfricaNews, 23JAN2024, revealing it takes four doses of the now mandatory vaccine before it will work:
It is known as RTS,S/AS01, or, Mosquirix, a “first-generation malaria vaccine”. It is now being pushed by the UN-WHO/GAVI Vaccine Alliance (formerly known as GAVI=Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization). The UN-WHO is also claiming that their small scale malaria vax pilot program, started back in 2019, has prevented deaths caused by other diseases!
On 31DEC2023, Cameroon became the first country outside of the ‘pilot program’ to impose the world’s first routine/mandatory immunization program on its children. Interestingly, the UN-WHO did not reveal this until 22JAN2024. The UN-WHO also revealed that they’ve been stockpiling the vaccine in Benin, Burkina Faso and Liberia, in preparation for routine/mandatory immunization programs in those countries. For Cameroon, the UN-WHO began quietly stockpiling the vaccines (delivering them at night) in November 2023.
SABC News, 23JAN2024, reveals the rollout was so secret that most parents didn’t even know about the now mandatory vaccine:
AfricaNews, 29NOV2023:
Gavi video from November 2023:
Malaria is not caused by a virus or bacteria, it is caused by a Plasmodium sporozoite/parasite.
A small gang of hogs, sporty choppers, and even an Italian spy posing as a Harley, infiltrated the South Wing of the Pine Ridge Mall, in Chubbuck, Idaho, during its inaugural indoor Winter/New Year automobile show.
Videos by me.
Bopper Chopper:
Wanted Hog:
AMF Aermacchi ‘Sportster’ Z90:
Police Hog:
Pine Ridge Mall, inaugural indoor Winter/New Year car show: SOUTH WING!
Purchased new in 1972, in Rupert, Idaho, this old F-250 is still owned by the same family. It was recently restored in Pocatello, Idaho, with a lot of help from friends. Sadly, the original owner died before the restoration was completed.
It was shown-off during the weekend of January 13th & 14th, 2024, in the Pine Ridge Mall, in Chubbuck, Idaho.
Photo via United States Air Force, no date indicated.
To the U.S. Army Air Force (USAAF) the bubble-top North American P-51D was known as the Mustang, in the newly created U.S. Air Force (USAF) it was known as the F-51 Mustang. For British empire (Commonwealth of Nations) members still using the World War Two combat aircraft, it was known as the Mustang Mark-4.
South African Air Force Mustang Mark-4. Photo via U.S. Air Force, date and location (likely near Suwon-si) not indicated.
Cold War: Approximately 1947 (due to U.S. President Harry Truman’s Truman Doctrine) to 1991 (Operation Desert Storm, collapse of Soviet Union).
Silent U.S. Air Force film, edited by me to show SAAF Mustang Mk-4s joining USAF F-51 Mustangs for a ground attack operation. One of the SAAF Mk-4s crash landed upon returning. Date and location not indicated:
Wrecked SAAF Mustang Mk-4s, probably on an airbase near Suwon-si. Photo via USAF, date not indicated.
The red nosed Mustangs are the SAAF Mark-4s. Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
The South African Air Force (SAAF) Mustang 4s were there at the very beginning of the Korean conflict.
Squadron shacks belonging to USAF 39th Fighter Interceptor Squadron (FIS) and the 12th Fighter Bomber Squadron (FBS), then what appears to be a chapel. The shack with the flag is the headquarters of the 2nd Squadron ‘Flying Cheetahs’ of the SAAF. Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Silent U.S. Army film (by somebody with the last name of Fox) showing SAAF Second Squadron (Flying Cheetahs) ‘bombing-up’, and warming up (film info says temps were below zero Fahrenheit) their Mustang Mark-4s, near Suwon, Korea, 17DEC1950:
High octane aviation gasoline. Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Loading the Browning .50 caliber machine guns. Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
The SAAF Mark-4s used two styles of propellers. Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
I suspect the ‘drop tanks’ (external fuel tanks) have been modified to be napalm bombs. Photo via USAF, no date indicated.
On 23JAN2024, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and General Manager of the NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA) Stacy Cummings, signed contracts for the purchase of about 220-thousand 155-millimeter artillery projectiles worth US$1.2-billion, as well as creating a “robust” and “innovative” military industrial complex. This is in addition to the US$10-billion worth of NSPA contracts issued since July 2023!