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Naval. Plecak Przetrwania na 72 godziny.
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Welcome to Matylda's channel behind the fence.
Today my guest is a veteran of the
Grom Nawal military unit. Good morning,
hello, I guess you're my guest. And that's right,
because we're staying at your house. [ Music]
Music] [Applause]
[Applause] [Music] Did
this interest in you even begin
when you were a little
boy somewhere in the neighborhood? You
played war as little boys. I mean, I
'm from that generation where there wasn't
much choice for entertainment, so
entertainment was the garden, the orchard, the construction of
single-family houses that were nearby, but
also scouting and the first encounter
with such survival, even if that's the word.
Back then, no one knew it, rather,
survival, these were
activities among the Cub Scouts, and then to
evolve into such a unit, it was a game. Do you
have to stand out with any
special qualities? Every citizen can
get into such a military unit because
it's a unit that accepts
people who really
want to, are able to, and have
various skills, not only those typically
attributed to soldiers. We seem to think
every day that
we live in peaceful places. But looking
at recent years, what has happened and
what is happening abroad and what
turbulent times we are in, I think this is
only an apparent calm. You know that the
history of the world is history.
What can we do as ordinary
citizens who have no idea
how to
prepare, how to evacuate, and
where to even begin? Because everyone
gets up every morning, goes to work, to school, and
thinks that tomorrow
the sun will shine and nothing will happen.
Stop thinking of yourself as an
ordinary citizen and become an extraordinary
extraordinary
citizen. How can you do this? This
is precisely the change, the mental change,
because each of us must feel that we are equally
equally
important. I don't like to quote Zac, but
differently. This is a quote said by a
gentleman whom I really dislike. So,
by Stalin, that the death of an individual is a
tragedy and the death of 100,000 is a
is a
statistic. So if we don't want to be
so statistical, we have to
start thinking
a little more broadly about our own
safety, to be that
extraordinary person, not a statistic, because
when you learned history, you
probably had statistics. In history school, you
heard how many thousands of
war casualties there were, how many soldiers during one
battle and another, how many people were evacuated,
what were the losses during the siege of a
given city? It's all
statistics. But there are individual people
who, as you said,
stop being ordinary and start being
extraordinary, who consciously live in
peacetime. Peacetime is the time when we should
should
prepare and think that this time of
peace will end someday. It's fashionable to
talk about
geopolitics, about the geopolitical position of
every country, and we have a rather ugly
geopolitical position
in our
geopolitical space. Systematically, for 200 years, there's a
major armed conflict every 30 years.
In my book, which you're
hiding somewhere, there's a list. How does this look so
generalized from the last partition of
Poland in
1795 and later? I have the
November Uprising, the January Uprising, the
revolution, the
Napoleonic Wars, the Spring of Nations, the
Bolshevik World War I,
martial law. The Russians left
Poland. Russian troops left Poland in
in
1994. We have another 29 years of peace.
Our geopolitical location means
that we have systematic wars. If
we look at Chile, those wars occur
every 200 years, the United States, who threatens them? Civil wars,
some war with Mexico, and for a long time,
nothing. The Swiss, their
geopolitical location, geopolitical mountains, politics,
what they did around them also shows
that their last battle was during the People's War of
1848. If you look at the map of battles, the
map of wars, this is our space here. This
This
Central European space is marked by
many dots,
something is happening, and I know that my argument is
quite long, but I'm not someone who
wants to scare
us, I want to make us aware of where we are
and how weak our
our
early school preparation is, because knowing this from a
historical perspective, not how a minor
analyst could change teaching to
teach children in school what
we're talking about here. Today, it's about this:
if something starts happening, to be able to
survive. Well, how to survive,
where to start? How many things can you take with you?
What are we going to talk about here? We
should learn in
elementary school because, looking at other countries,
Japan. It lies in a tectonically located
area where earthquakes are quite frequent,
and is it normal for
children to learn how to behave
during earthquakes? They know what to do with
themselves, how to function, what to do.
We will go to Israel. All children in
schools are taught how to behave
during a hostage situation during a
terrorist attack during a
bombing because it happens quite
often there. Americans, in my opinion,
are also quite good. They know quite well
how to behave in school when
someone enters with a gun. Children know that they should
close the room, that they should be quiet. It
thrown into the process every
day, that it can happen. I assume that
if we have a war every 30 years. So,
considering that we live for 60, 90 years, they
will look at our grandparents, our great-
grandparents. They survived World War I,
World War II, communism, and
later martial law. So
what do we have in our lives? I was born in
'74, I survived martial law, but let's
get back to the merits of what you want to
know. So, to this meat, I believe
believe
that if a civilian wants to survive a war, they
must If one stays put, one
is doomed, perhaps not to
death, but to dramatic experiences, and
their fate is certainly not
easy. Why is this so? Because if
war breaks out, the first fight is like
in a beehive for the queen bee, which is
called the queen. In our lives, there are
politicians, the president, the prime minister, ministers, the
military, and other structures. At
first, they take care of themselves, that is, the
security of the state.
So, first, they will fight on the
borders. First, they will try to consolidate
this situation, control
it, and then they
will fight and fight. The evacuation of civilians,
as demonstrated in 1939, showed that everyone from Warsaw
evacuated. They didn't
know where they were going to return. Roads were
cleared during the war. The railways give
priority to the military, which
delivers ammunition, and carries equipment. Civilians
wait for them, so we, as civilians,
are on the sidelines. Later, the
fight begins and civilians are helped, but at
first, if you don't have any
supplies, you don't have
survival equipment, you haven't
evacuated, you're left to
your own devices, and no matter what the politicians say
during the campaign. Elections, no matter how much we do
n't listen to them, believe me, when there's
war, it's all crossed out. There's a
book I read and
it's a phenomenal read. The summer of
1939, what war life was like for Poland on the eve of
World War II. A train derailment.
What's going on in the theater? The army is so good
that it won't give up its fists. We sign
treaties. Hitler is not crazy. He won't
attack Poland. Reassuring the entire
nation that it will be like this. In
1939, these people lived,
breathed, walked the streets, got married. First
Communion took place in June and May in
1939. It was nice, but in October
1939. We were under occupation, and who could hold
accountable those politicians who, just
two months ago, swore
loyalty to the homeland and that they would fight to the
last drop of
blood. Many soldiers fought for each other,
died. Some evacuated, and some
never returned to
Poland. How do you know when to
start evacuating? Yes, this
is the moment when we should
start taking an interest in politics today.
Start taking an interest in what's
happening in the world because there are people And institutions
that know more than us, when we
become this extraordinary,
conscious citizen, they set up this, it
looks like this: it's quite a big
philosophy of packing in general, and the
philosophy of the evacuation backpack is
taken directly from my work at my
company. We were in the field where there was
fighting, where there was a war. You have to have an
evacuation backpack with
all your equipment. Whatever
happens, you have the equipment you're not
using, it's packed, you take it,
put it on your shoulder, and you can evacuate with this equipment. I later
later
worked for
quite large Polish companies in Libya and Pakistan,
and it was fundamental that our expat
employees have equipment they
can take and evacuate at any time.
This is a
kit for one person, and any person,
regardless of age. I'm not talking about
infants, but about children,
even three years old, who can
march, and they should have such a backpack
with them. If a kid can run around the sandbox like crazy, they should be
able to do it with it. He can walk 23 km with a backpack,
right? He can do it. He can do it. He can do it, but you
have to explain to him how he has it and what's
inside and how to use it. I
think a
three-year-old child can open a candy bar and unscrew a
bottle to drink water, but if he does
n't have it, he won't drink it. But we're back to
adults. The philosophy is to
have survival equipment with you and in your backpack for at
least 72 hours, at least 72 hours
in all conditions and
regardless of summer or winter. I'm
packed exactly the same way because even on a
cold summer night in Poland you can get quite
cold, and I once froze here
near Rembertów on July 2nd. Really well,
that's what's very important, not to
wonder whether it's summer
or winter, but to have a fixed set.
Exactly. I'm wearing shorts today
because it's quite warm and
we won't make a fuss about getting
dressed. But the first stage of
such an evacuation backpack container is
how we're dressed. We can have
pockets on our sweatshirts, we can have
pants with large pockets,
combat trousers, and so on, so already in such We
can have tissues in our pockets. We
can have a candy bar. We
can have a heater. We even have to have a
disk with a database of
all our data with us. I'll tell you in a moment. So
even if I lose my backpack, I'll
have something with me that will allow me to
survive, even if I have
combat pants, RSC foil, which will be able to
warm me, not warm me, but protect me from
heat loss. Without
it, I have something with me.
My head is already telling me. I lost my
backpack, but what I put on the
pockets is mine. Where is my
fancy favorite knife? I'll have a
knife in my pocket. I can handle myself with
that knife.
So the first thing is to dress so
that I can have pockets with me. Our
outfit, which is the first or
last phase of our survival, is the color of the
outfit that doesn't remind
us of a camouflage uniform. It's quite heavy, so it doesn't
remind us of one
of the warring sides, but the textile industry today
is so rich. We can buy
various types of combat pants in various
colors. Shirts that are sewn
like military or
survival equipment. Someone who hikes in Górak
likes camping. After all, all these
people use exactly this type of equipment,
i.e. combat trousers, shirts with pockets, and this
is not military equipment. This is
very comfortable equipment and boots above the ankle. Everyone
goes hiking in the mountains, they like trekking, they have
such things, and what
I'm talking about now is something that's in the closet and you don't have to
buy boots above the ankle. Comfortable shoes,
but the colors are not really that noticeable either.
Today, it doesn't
matter much anymore, because if we were talking about
camouflage or if we were talking about
how to march, we would gladly
hide. However, today, optoelectronics
are at such a level that even if
we go to Washington to
my friend Myśliwski's Szuster store, we will
buy such equipment.
Often, the army doesn't have such equipment.
I'm talking about thermal imaging, night vision, so if I were to sneak in at
night with
four or five people and there are soldiers on the
other side who have thermal imaging,
how can he distinguish that it's
not the enemy sneaking, but a family
of five? So today it's better to
evacuate during the day, because in
war, First he shoots, then he asks
who's coming. Okay, but I'll talk about that. The
backpack is not for us, we don't take family
family
silverware or pillows, although the
packaging is nice, brought from Iran. We only
take with us. What I said
allows us to survive 72 hours and
secure our future life,
no matter where in the world we find ourselves. I
find ourselves. I
say this with full
deliberation because there are many stories of
Polish soldiers and families who
left Poland in 1939, 1940, 1941 and
never returned to Poland. In 1946, they
started their new lives in Australia,
Canada, the United States,
Brazil, Argentina, Great
Britain and left with only what they had in their
pockets. They had no documents with them, no
photos, they had
nothing with them. So this backpack will
secure us for the future because we don't
know how history will unfold. So,
apart from surviving the 72 hours that I
assume in our
geopolitical space, in that time we should
reach a place where we will be
provided with direct assistance, have with us
materials that will allow us to
start a new life.
OKE, the first RCZ I would take with me
is A
transformer radio with an antenna and
batteries because if there's a war, like
what Ukraine has shown, but also other
conflicts, the first thing the world's armies do is
cut off all possible information.
So if we have a super fancy
cell phone, I use it, you won't have
phone connection,
internet, GPS, and all the other things I
use so well today, but some
radio waves will remain, and on
these radio waves you'll be
able to access information
that will tell us which way to go or
which not to go, or what's happening
around us. We'll figure out how to get to a
bridge. I have a map and a compass with me,
and when we get to that bridge, it
turns out the bridge has been blown up. We walked
a long way and it didn't make sense.
This kind of radio worked great
during the flood. When I was in Racibórz, I
was an employee at the Racibórz
Rafako boiler factory, and I worked as an
industrial guard. Radio Vanessa
broadcast all the information on where to
get water, food, where to get
lost, where to meet someone,
everything on such a radio. The entire city is
cut off from power, and this radio is
our information base. You see, it
will be interwoven all the time.
Secure everything in bags, waterproof. It
rains quite often here, but Poland is
crisscrossed by quite large rivers, so
right after the start, we protect everything from getting
wet. But there's
also another thing: such a bag
has its own buoyancy. And when I'm
going through some water, I want to
swim across a river or a lake. If
If
a little more air remains in each bag, we'll have
where we can
pop a bottle, pour the water out, put it
under the tap, and it will have
buoyancy. Or put other bottles in the
sleeves. Such a baby won't sink
because it will simply float on the water,
so a radio is essential. A
cell phone. Of course,
Our future. This is our
future if we want to
don't know. Birth certificates,
marriage certificates, land ownership deeds,
house, all our documentation, photos from
baptisms, First Communions, weddings. If there is
n't enough backpack, we can
pack everything on a floppy disk. which
is packed even in two pleas to
each other, of course. Now you smart
IT guys will say that all this can be
in the cloud. Of course, let it be in the
cloud too. Just remember that
this cloud can be, someone, the
CIA, we may not have access to it, we can't
evaporate. After all,
no. So we have to have everything. This is
our future. Certificates that I am a
doctor, a lawyer, a locksmith, a welder, a
mechanic. Somewhere I go to the world, take them
out and let them read it, and they will see that I am who I
am. A very important thing,
of course, documents, a passport, here I happen to have a
second drive with my database,
also everything in
plastic bags. An important thing, the cashier, the cashier,
is very
important. There are several currencies that do not
dollar never loses value. If we take zlotys with
us, they may
not be quite as valuable. If
we are together, dollars,
we can buy something more with them. It could also
be gold, a little bit of some gold. How much
money are we taking with us? I would
take 1,000 dollars, 1,000 euros, some
zlotys, and that's it.
Keep this money in one
place, not something in a backpack, something on you
or something like that, but not everything we have in our
socks because we'll become a walking
bank. So, the guy said, let
's take all the money with us. Well, in war, there
are a lot of bad people who
have a vested interest in this and they'll start cutting us off along
the way because we're going with all the cash. So, we
have to believe in this system of
world banks that we'll be able to choose our
money in the account if we go to
another place, but we have to have
something with us from the papers. I also have a
map with
me, I have a notebook, a pencil, a marker. And this
is a map of our country, just as
close as a map, a map of Poland, a map of the
region I'll assume I'll be
passing through. So, I need to have that, a compass, a
compass, a
tactical watch, and here's one to know how to
use it. In peacetime, you have to
learn to work on the map, you
know the place you want to go to,
as I said,
GPS might not
work. I won't tell
you so much about the paper work philosophy on the compass
because it will be too long.
and here we are closing the topic. The
next thing that
interests everyone is: 72-hour eating system: what to
what to
eat. I'm trained not to
eat. I'm joking. You can't train yourself not to eat, but my
food package is enough food to
to
last. As you'll see, there are no
canned or preserved foods here because they
freeze-dried foods. I take them with me, but I do. I'll talk about
them in a moment. I take
three basic things with me: a
bowl, a spoon with a knife and
fork, and a clever little mug. It
really doesn't weigh much. It's in every
tourist shop. Those who go on
trips have something with Salt.
Often, a hundred dollars come in here, so we
know what I mean, true, but I'm
joking, a little serious. It helps. It helps
throughout our entire hike. I
first use everything that
fate gives me. If it's warm, there are apples, plums,
cherries, strawberries, carrots growing in
the field. I eat what's there or someone
offers me a sandwich. And this is a reserve
ration and energy bars, as I
said. Some energy jellies.
Anything high in
energy, I take with me. If you
could tell me where to buy such things, these are the
products, all the shops.
travel all sports stores these
are jellies that I use when I
run these are bars that my
friend in Poland produces they are some of the best they
taste good to me when I don't like anything else on
my mountain trips I
like them. Of course, in this
situation, no one looks at the expiration date anymore,
right? So this is something I
take with
me, a bit of a pack, for the journey, right? Does
it matter in what order we pack? What's
pack? What's
at the top is the most
useful and valuable? What's
lower is less expensive because
food products? You packed it all the way to the bottom, but that's how I
pack now, discussing
all these things? Water. I
have a fancy, nice canister here, but if
it's a regular water bottle or
three or four of them, just a lot of plastic
around us, it can
be a regular bottle and we're free.
Right? Maybe I should start with the
backpack itself. The backpack itself is no more than
25 liters for a Libra, it won't weigh more than
8.7 kg. Mine weighs less than 7 kg. The backpack is
supposed to be something that allows us to climb over a fence, jump over it, and
fence, jump over it, and
walk for a long time.
If we take 15 kg, believe me,
after 10 kg, you're fed up and
wondering if every meter of string
isn't too much? Taken together, it's probably also
waterproof, yes, it is. It's resistant,
but it doesn't matter anyway because
everything I pack is tightly
packed. And the material has to be
water-resistant because a backpack like this can weigh
half a kilogram or even a
kilogram after rain, it can be heavier because it will
simply soak through. So it's made of a
material that doesn't absorb water. It has two
columns. It has two columns and a first aid kit, which
I'll explain later, is on the outside because we
consider the first aid kit to be the
easiest thing for us to access. Side pockets,
like when I have water. So, water ends up on the
side in the pocket, so that's it.
About the backpack, as I
said, each backpack, each person
has their own backpack, so if it's a
child, it will simply be a
smaller backpack for them to
have even just a candy bar in there. Even just a
warm jacket and a water bottle. It's
already secured. It has to
have that much, that
much with food and candy bars. I
also like to use
technological innovations and I have a
chemical water filter with me, so there. There are
some coal inside. Is there anything I can
drink from the tank or from the
river to
weigh myself? Technological industry. I have
food. There are
liquids. You could immediately talk about
our hygiene. I also have quite an important
thing with me because I like this
fancy little soap. It doesn't smell too
nice. But it repels mosquitoes, but it
repels mosquitoes. It has an additional function to
repel mosquitoes, so I have soap with me.
I know that ladies are looking in
horror. What does my
cosmetic bag look like? I have toothpaste with me. For
teeth, I have a toothbrush with me, tissues,
dry tissues,
wet tissues, and
and
much easier to hide for
intimate hygiene. Ladies have to take care of what they take with them from their own perspective.
perspective.
This is my cosmetic bag. It's great for
repelling mosquitoes because we don't think about it every day either,
and it's worth having such soap because
after washing, it won't repel
mosquitoes, so this is what it looks like. This is my
cosmetic bag. tissues. I
also have a second pair. You know, you can
wipe your butt with a leaf, but how do you do it? It's
much
easier to pack a tissue, a cosmetic bag, as you
can see, I have two plastic wraps, one is
in my backpack, the other is with me, it's in my
pocket. The same goes for
tissues. One is in my backpack, the other is there, so there's something new here. It's a bit smaller, so packing is a new technology, maybe not so new anymore. So there are these warmers that, after unpacking, contain some chemical compound that, when I apply it to the body, preferably on the
solar plexus, starts to heat up and I
feel warm. There are also quite a few of them on the market, they
heat up for up to 8
hours, so one with me, two or
three. Something like this can save our lives in a backpack, so we
pack a few words
words
about the first aid kit. Another thing that's not very
common, and I think it should be in this backpack. It's a special
special
plaster for pneumothorax, so if we
have a war, a shot to the chest,
knowledge is also needed here. You need to know
that something like this exists and works.
If we don't have it, you
can also make a dressing from the foil itself
that allows us to survive a
chest injury, so it doesn't weigh anything. I
have it with me and I have it with me. Of course. First
aid kit. We live
comfortably and suddenly we have to leave the
house. It's cold at night, we're tired and
suddenly we have upper respiratory tract infections.
Most of the pills we used were for sore
throats and upper respiratory tract infections. We already
have experience from the Ukrainian border. This
is the first thing. First aid
kit. Of course, as you say,
plasters, but I'm also going here, you
know, military stuff, so plasters and
products that
are professional dressings for
bullet wounds, so they stop bleeding immediately.
You can buy TET, it's everywhere. Today, there
was a time when this
really wasn't available on the market.
Painkillers, as you can see,
more heaters, more foil,
water purification patches, tablets,
elastic bandage, so all of this is with me.
me.
No, all of this is with me. It's
most not too big. You
can also put in this first aid kit, and of course, you have to
remember that if someone has a
chronic illness, they should have a
supply of these medications with them. You
need to take care of your child, but also, for
example, your dog or cat. If you
evacuate them, it's worth having them with you and
talk to a veterinarian because there are such
products and medications. Tablets to calm
animals will be a bit of a turnoff. But he won't be
terrified of explosions, he will be
coming with us. Because I would
n't leave my dog. He'd probably go together.
Most people would probably take him. Most people
with a first aid kit. As I said, we're
dressed for the
season. We all have
long pants, high boots above the
knee. We're getting married in layers. I
like merino wool underwear, it's
proven. I hike in the mountains.
I love these things, so I have these things with
with
me and we're moving on. Another bag
bag
people. Before we move on to clothes, that's
all we have. Survival items for
survival. If he sees that I have
more tissues, a string, a fire starter, a
multi-tool, but I
also have a lighter, storm matches,
another string, a light, for example, a
chemical light. After breaking it, you can
Earphones, meaning
earplugs. We'll find ourselves in some
place where we'll be tired, in some
shelter, and there will be someone snoring, a
baby crying, we want to
sleep, we want to have a little something. It's in
Two women sit next to each other
and tape, tape, tape, tape, tape, and you can't
calm them down, and during the flight it
's even louder. They're more
angry than a crying baby, so I have it
with me. It's also worth having a
whistle, for example, and
every child should have it. Because in such a
whistle, there's room
not only for a
match to warm themselves, but also for a piece of
paper with information about where our
child is, who they are from, where they're
going. So, we need to write down the
address of where we're going on this piece of paper.
If our child gets lost, we'll have the
information here, and they'll know
that when we read it,
we know where to drop them off. There was a photo from
Paris where a mother arrived with her daughter,
probably four or five years old, and she
had the entire address written on her back, and
everything in pen. The mother kept
correcting it during the trip so that the
child would have the exact location on her back.
No, this is
safety, so they don't get lost, and
such a container of some of
my gadgets. I have a lot of strings with me.
Somehow, these strings have
always been useful to me. This is
actually the only thing that weighs a little more
than the other things. No, it's just mine,
mine,
but I'll be carrying it. It's
worth it. Clothes. I'm giving up the sleeping mat. I'm giving up the sleeping bag.
Of the warm
things, I have a down jacket with me, which also
also
ended up in the bag. There's a down jacket. A
masterpiece for me is this kind of padding. I
me. You can say it's a general military padding in colors too. You'll find plenty on the market, and this padding makes sense. When I put it on, you talked about a waterproof backpack when it rains. I put the backpack underneath. I'm underneath. If you have a jacket with you, then a jacket, but your legs are wet. This padding is
is
high enough that it practically reaches the calf,
so it can protect you
from rain, even storms, so it doesn't
get under your feet. What's more, this padding has a
system of strings and cords inside, so it can be
made into a bag so that when you
sit and rest, it covers you
from above. So this padding is
something that I also weigh, but I don't I'm
not moving this padding, I'm going to use
it too. It's worth stocking up on. Well, you
can just imagine it now, I've pulled it out
somewhere to use it, either for everyday use
or when I'm
traveling somewhere. Clothes. For me, it's like this: I have one
one
set: long johns and a
warm T-shirt. This is warm long johns and a T-
been with me for a long time, both
in Nepal and Chile. These
are very good quality items from good
companies, quite expensive, but this is my
survival, so I use it, no one else. Yes, but you have
one piece, yes,
yes, so it's my spare. When
I go or was in Nepal, as I said, in
Chile, it was with me and it's
proven, so I don't use it every day. It's
not that I regret it. I
just have
one set of underwear packed,
so no panties, socks, and a
regular T-shirt, and also rather warm socks, yes, yes,
warm socks with these shoes, and I'm wearing the
second one. So I only have
one pair to change, everything also in
bags because these bags might come in handy during the trip.
You told us about crossings, there are many rivers, so there's a
second pocket, so
packed, quickly, to show you that
I can, that I can fit
everything here.
As I said, the hierarchy of
packing is such that what
we need most, for
example, something to eat, is
closest, the rest is at the
bottom, so a backpack, everything that was
on the ST bag, a
large bag is there so that if we were to
cross a river,
we pack this backpack into a large bag, and this
bag becomes our lifeline. It wo n't
n't
sink. It's worth having such a bag with us. What
What
else, definitely
glasses, or even
goggles, because if you look at what
people look like after shelling after
bombings, most of them are
cuts to the face and eyes, so I can't
imagine being able to fight today. A
soldier who doesn't have
eye protection. If I have no
vision, I can't see, I can't help myself. I
can't evacuate. Vision is
essential, so good good glasses, even
for the day, you can have a light source. The
market also allows us to use batteries. which
are batteries. Finger-powered batteries.
Rechargeable batteries. If they are charged. Well,
obviously, if we don't have electricity, we don't
charge them. So, finger-powered flashlights,
gloves, that's the same basic thing. War is
dust, dirt,
debris, lots of glass, so
wherever I go, I'm always
wearing gloves. Not that it's flashy, it just
helps. A carabiner. A
carabiner. A
pocket, I'd also add goggles, but
of course, I'll throw them on my nose. There
's also a hat packed in there,
but I haven't shown it yet. We have a
7 kg backpack. Look at it, a
school backpack. I think a kid with a larger
backpack is going somewhere,
sitting next to me. These are also important, not that
later, to adjust how someone
can walk, how they like it, how you
I need to replenish things, but I'm talking about 80
things, including a backpack. This is something we
simply have at home and we don't need to go on a
shopping spree
to equip ourselves, we just don't have them
prepared. You don't have them
prepared. As I said, it's
just packed.
Listen, I hope you like it. Here, you will
take this good advice to heart and
be responsible and stop
living in a safety bubble like I have
been living until now. We will wake up and
more people will be prepared, and
at least this backpack at each of our homes will
be ready for evacuation. And
if you want to fight and you have
such a spirit that you don't want to evacuate, then
also learn today how to use
weapons, radios and systems.
What is it like in the army, because if you go
into battle without this knowledge, you will be a
statistic. Thank you very much
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