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Mary, Monkey, Sun, Tree and Penis Whoreshippers - Part A - Daryl Kabatoff

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Jun 21, 2022, 3:39:09 AM6/21/22
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Mary, Monkey, Sun, Tree and Penis Whoreshippers - Part A - Daryl Kabatoff
June 19th 2022 4:20 pm 125,940 words (151 pages)

“The very concept of a nation founded by European settlers is offensive to me. Old stock White Canadians are an unpleasant relic, and quite frankly, replaceable. And we will replace them." - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, when asked to comment on his Open Borders Immigration Strategy, speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer

“Christians are the worst part of Canadian society.” - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer

“Honour killings shouldn’t be called ‘barbaric.’” - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer

“They are not sexual assaults, but ‘honour’ rapes.” - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer

“If you’re not willing to embrace Islam, you’re not a part of our society.” - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer

“Who remembers the Armenian genocide? If they can’t remember the Armenian genocide, who is goink to be concerned about the Jews?” - Adolph Hitler speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer

“America is ruled by a homosexual Indonesian Islamist who demands that Americans take the death jab. Similarly Trudeau is an Islamist who demands that Canadians take the death jab, squeak squeak.” -Squeaky Squeaky

“Without writers, nothing speak so good in word stuff.” - Eddie Izzard


Contents:

Aviation, Boating, TIG Welding
ATV’s, Mini-Trucks
4x4’s, 6x6’s, 8x8’s
Tracked Vehicles
Velodrome and Bicycles
Wooden Aircraft, Boats and Cars
Horse Drawn Wagons
Affordable Home Ownership
Banking, Wealth Management
Diamonds, Gold and Money
Female Fashion Trends
Pants That Fit
Largest Building in Saskatchewan
British, German and Russian History
Islamic History
High School Students, Hockey Players
Big-Nosed Cree
Gun Laws, Ballistics
Native Governance
Restaurants and Fine Dining
Appeasement and Being Nice
Law of 22 Prairial
Psychiatric Abuse, Horror
Blinkin’ Lights
Metallurgy and “Science”
Son of Sam
Yaks and Yakutia (The Sakha Republic)
Magadan and Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy
Marina Galkina
Religion and Humor
The Anti-Christ Revealed
Red and White Depopulation Jabs
El Nino and La Nina Climate Oscillations


Forwards:

Run in rural and city elections as “Republic”, and affirm that you are defending:

1) the right to own property, including land and guns
2) the right to grow food and other plants, to raise and prepare animals for food, to sell your food
3) the right to decide upon the education of your children
4) the right to free speech and beliefs, including the right to not be inoculated with so-called vaccines or forced into psychiatric or any other medical care
5) the right to be paid in real money which is gold and silver coins
6) the right to “freely” innovate, to fly your own aviation creations without government interference, with either no or minimal taxation, the right to movement

Affirm that you support these six points on your election literature and run for office under the “Republic” ticket. Defend the Republic of the United States of America and fight for a Republic in Canada and in other nations. If you are not comfortable publicly defending the idea of a Republic, then you can still affirm you are defending the six points listed above in your election literature.

In addition to affirming these four points, consider publishing something resembling the following paragraph or reproduce it in whole and possibly add some of your views to it and to the above…

I believe that people should also have the right to innovate and place their own automotive creations on the roads but should be taxed for road construction and road maintenance. Somewhat similarly, people flying will have to pay for airport landing and storage fees should they choose to land at and fly from such facilities. People flying or driving their own creations should have affordable insurance available to them, they should be allowed to pay the same low rate required to insure a 20-year-old mid-sized automobile, or even a lower rate as an incentive, in order to motivate people to innovate and create. Governments should continue to insure that the private aircraft are not a hazard to the commercially flown aircraft and restrict their flight in certain locations. Regardless, governments should be giving people options and not taking options away.

I personally do not believe that people should be given free homes or provided with welfare assistance so they may pay rent to landlords. Instead, by paying people in gold and silver coins (instead of paper dollar bills), inflation of the paper money supply and the resulting increase in the prices of consumer goods would be eliminated, thereby allowing people to earn enough money (gold and silver coins) so they may purchase or build a home. Gold bearing regions in Canada should be opened up to the average Canadian so they may stake a claim, the inflation of the money supply should be limited to the extraction of gold and silver, and gold and silver should not be traded in any electronic or paper form in part to help determine the true value of silver in relationship to gold.

Many millions of acres of land in Canada and the USA that are gold bearing are being mined by foreigners or by those Canadians and Americans who provide themselves with special privileges, or the land and the wealth within is claimed by the crown (The Queen of England and soon by Charles), it is land that citizens should be able to work in order to build wealth for themselves. Homeless people can be provided with a small concrete structure in the countryside where they may pay a mortgage on the land, on the concrete poured, and on the oil stove, door and window installed. Homeless people can live in tents and trailers in the gold bearing regions where they would have the right to mine for the mineral, should they wish they may return to the protection of their small permanent concrete home located in a non-mining area, perhaps in another province or state. I believe people should have homes and that it should be done in such a way to prevent banks and landlords from benefiting.


City Provides Space For Projects:

The program I envision and outline below is opposite to that of communism, it allows for people to freely innovate and freely travel with their homebuilt creations. The civic, state, provincial and federal governments should all be allowing people to “freely” innovate and build and fly their own aviation creations with no legal hurdles. The issue is about choices, people should be allowed to make choices for themselves and be free to travel in the mode they choose. The program can be established in any city, province, state or country, all that is required are groups of people who desire to build up rather than to tear down, all that is required are groups of people who desire to live free without forcing others to live by their rules.

In Saskatoon the land south of 19th Street West between Avenues B and C and the freeway, and also land south of 20th Street between Avenue A and Third Avenue should be utilized for city residents to develop metal working skills and build small projects, with the immediate goal of becoming skilled enough with TIG welding and aluminum fabrication so that they may build their own small aluminum landing craft, small speed boat or paddle-wheeler, road vehicle, or some sort of airplane. This is land closest to the poorest of the poor, the site is ideal for giving hope to people that have given up hope. The location has river access for launching their finished boats, and a slipway (ramp) can be built in order to launch planes over the South Saskatchewan River, and the building would be large enough to place a runway on the roof so that planes may take off, again to the south-west and over the South Saskatchewan River. I envision a large building downtown that stretches for several blocks and stands approximately ten stories high, the freeway passes through the center of the building, with a slipway heading about 210 degrees, to the South-South West so that aircraft can launch off a ramp and over the river.

The higher quality TIG welders that have pulse capability smoke less than most every other welding technology, these welders, grinders, and other equipment that produces smoke, should all be used in conjunction with smoke extractors as the smoke generated from grinders is as harmful as the smoke generated from the welders. These pulse TIG welders utilize very small amounts of power when used to weld thinner materials, lowering the overall costs of the program and lowering the cost to the participants as they learn how to use the equipment.

Those who participate should be provided with secure lockers so they may store their own personal welding supplies and small projects, such as their own tungsten anodes, filler wire, cutting and grinding wheels, masks, gloves and other welding supplies. As devices used for sharpening tungsten anodes are easily contaminated, they should obtain their own anode sharpening devices. The tungsten anodes are held by TIG torches that can be contaminated and broken, people should purchase a TIG torch that feels comfortable and fits their hands and needs. As breathing masks get coated with germs and become moldy, participants should obtain and care for their own should they have desire for one, and they should consider building themselves powered air respirators. Participants should pay daily for the electricity and argon gas they consume, and of course will be required to pay for any metal they require for their chosen projects. People using the donated or borrowed band saw or table saw should put money up front for replacement blades. People should buy their own drill bits and learn how to sharpen them. People running used lumber through planers are risking the destruction of the blades, everybody using the planer should put money up front towards the purchase of new blades.

After the students demonstrate proficiency with AC pulse TIG aluminum welding (by completing small projects such as a fuel tank for their car, truck, bicycle or motorcycle, landing craft or airplane), then they would be eligible for a secure space were they may over time assemble their own small aluminum boat, airplane or all terrain vehicle, or one of the other projects. There should be no MIG or other welders in the facility in order to force the students to become proficient with the TIG welders, which smoke less than the other welders. At the beginning people would require very small storage lockers, they would trade up to larger lockers as their projects develop.

There should be no woodworking, gluing nor painting conducted in the large downtown facility as efforts must be made to maintain air quality and reduce explosion hazards. Some glues that are more environmentally friendly would be approved for use in the metal working facilities, most gluing would take place in the main woodworking facilities which would be located away from this proposed large downtown projects facility, it is due to both space and safety reasons. I believe we can have a woodworking facility, which provides space for wooden airplanes and other wooden projects, would be spread over 160 acres of land on the western outskirts of Saskatoon, and if that isn’t enough, then the City of Saskatoon, or the “Aviation Department”, would purchase the adjacent quarter sections of land, primarily so people would build wooden and composite airplanes and boats for themselves there. Many will choose to build their airplanes out of wood as the cost of the meager amount of wood required for a small airplane is negligible, but they would still require some TIG welded parts which they would construct at the downtown facility. Between the downtown metal working shops and the western rural wooden works live many people who would benefit from both facilities.

The Aviation Department should have priority over and total oversight of the Boat Building Department and should assume responsibility to maintain security of all people’s projects, and not allow unauthorized access as that would jeopardize the integrity of the projects. The Aviation Department requires people who are skilled in TIG welding and will not waste resources on purchasing nor on training people to operate MIG welders. The MIG welders would be certain to lessen the build time of the boats, but the issue is not to reduce build time of the boats but to teach people to become better TIG welders so they may attempt to build airplanes. Don’t turn people away when they arrive to the facility, provide the person with a chair in a classroom and show them instructional videos rather than application forms questioning their eligibility to participate. I envision a multistory building that would perhaps be the largest building in the province, and if the facility is not large enough to allow people secure space for building their metal boats and metal airplanes then additional facilities would be made available. There would be coffee shops, and ample walkways that would allow visitors to view the projects from behind glass, perhaps we can integrate pedestrian viewing tubes into the facility similar to the tube conveyors at Charles De Gaulle Airport in Paris. Similar spectator platforms and coffee shops would be built into the wooden airplane facility on the west side of the city. We can use assorted city facilities to teach people to pilot both boats and planes. Allowing people to innovate and create will likely reduce drug use, violence, suicide and sodomy, and save tax money over the long term.

The city should anticipate future provincial and federal governments that will encourage innovation and allow people to fly aircraft of their own designs and with minimal or no red tape and interference. Present laws prohibit the homebuilt aircraft from carrying adequate amounts of fuel and prevent the use of multiple engines, both of which adds great measures of safety. Laws prevent people from experimenting with variable swept wing designs, which also increase safety by reducing stall speeds when required. The city should make land available on the eastern and south-western outskirts for landing and parking these homebuilt creations. The city should not wait for future provincial and federal governments to encourage innovation and consider providing space and encouragement for unemployed and underemployed city residents to build their own aircraft now. People should start building their aviation creations now, knowing that future provincial governments will not hamper their ability to innovate, create and fly their own creations but will encourage and help enable them instead. It is a combination of 1) government restrictions, 2) government red-tape and 3) high insurance costs that hamper and even curtail people from innovating, building and flying their own aviation creations, the city of Saskatoon requires new provincial and federal governments to assist us to overcome these hurdles, but we should do our best without their immediate assistance.

The large building I envision to be used for the construction of aircraft should provide space for people to build aircraft of proven designs, and also provide space for people to freely innovate and build an aircraft (or other boats or vehicles) of their own design, but the latter space may be limited due to the construction of the proven designs taking up the space in the facility. It has been done elsewhere and can be done here: groups of people build copies of the same aircraft of a proven design, when the airplanes are completed then the builders draw lots for them. Or these planes may be “completed” without the engines and avionics, after distributing the aircraft (via drawing lots), then the new owner will have the option of which engine and avionics to install into his or her plane. We should be allowing groups of people to manufacture multiple copies of the same plane(s) of proven designs in the city facilities, and we should also seek to provide additional space for individuals to use who are building something unique. You can participate in a program where you draw lots for an aircraft and yet still be able to innovate by customizing your aircraft with anything from alternative wing and tail designs, extra fuel tanks or by adding electric motors, storage cupboards, or a bed, for example. I suggest that when building your first airplane it is best to follow a proven plan, demonstrate that you can accomplish such a project and then after that is accomplished be first in line to build an airplane of your own design. Those people drawing lots for their airplanes can receive the aircraft complete with wings, and then be free to innovate and change their wings to whatever later. There is a great multitude of airfoil designs that can be chosen for the wings and tails, we could have a program in place where the builders draw lots for the more or less completed fuselages and then the new owners attach the wings they chose to build for themselves… the wings can vary by length, by airfoil, by other attributes. Or you could have a program in place where the Aviation Department allows 100 people to co-operatively build 100 identical STOL wings for example, and then the people draw lots for these STOL wings, and then let the 100 new owners do whatever they want with those wings. It is nice to have choices in life, and the Aviation Department should strive to provide choices for people who are co-operatively working together in one way or another. The Aviation Department may find itself in a situation where the majority of the people wishing to participate all want to build copies of a small paddle-wheeler boat (not an airplane at all), and would have to make facilities available for that project, in order the please that majority and help enable that majority to complete their projects. Those people making small paddle-wheeler boats would construct the wooden components in the rural woodworking shop west of the city, and manufacture the metal components at the downtown riverside facility (south of 20th Street stretching from perhaps Third Avenue to Avenue C in Saskatoon).

There may be groups of people who desire and choose to build copies of triplanes, or biplanes, or short takeoff and landing (STOL) bush planes, or high-flying powered gliders that have retractable landing gear, retractable propellers and perhaps small retractable jet engines, or very stable and fast planes that have forward swept wing designs, or helicopters, or gyrocopters, or low-flying ground effect planes. Governments worked hard to prevent innovation and the construction of aircraft in Canada, many aircraft the Canadian government did manage to help build (with taxpayer money) were destroyed, sold below cost or outright given away to Islamists in foreign nations. We should reverse that and work hard to encourage the development of the aviation industry, starting with an aviation industry dedicated to helping impoverished to fly their own airplanes in Canada. We should be making planes that give us access to the northern lakes. We should be building fuel efficient “powered” gliders capable of traveling high up in the jet stream. We could be building biplanes or triplanes and use them for paintball dogfights, spectator admission fees could amount to substantial sums. We should pay attention to the Australian Jabiru program as it allows flexibility in choosing cabin sizes and provides engine and wing options for the builders (see Kitplanes February 2007). Furthermore Jabiru manufactures aluminum engine blocks then completes these new engines with cheap mass produced parts originally designed for automobile engines, Saskatoon’s aviators can accomplish similar.

I don’t see people building replica WWII fighter planes that are powered by 2,000+ horsepower V-12 engines and burn massive amounts of fuel, but instead scaled-down planes that utilize smaller engines that consume far less fuel. Using modern carbon-fiber composites, old designs may be resurrected and made stronger, lighter, more fuel efficient and safer. Some designs are far easier to build than others, back in the day Russian children easily built Yaks out of plywood and similar composites, there is absolutely no reason why children in Saskatoon can’t build improved and somewhat scaled-down or even full-sized Yaks using a combination of aluminum and the newer improved materials. We would not be permitting replica Messerschmitt Bf-109’s to be built in the city-owned facilities as the narrow stance of landing gear is a design flaw that killed many pilots. And I’m not sure why anybody in their right mind would want a replica German Focke-Wulf 190, or a replica British Spitfire, or a replica American P-51 Mustang, or a replica America P-47 Thunderbolt, or a replica American P-38 Lightning, or a replica of some stupid Japanese fighter plane when they could easily build and own their own replica of a Russian Yak, likely racism against Slavic people plays a role in their decision making processes. As mayor of Saskatoon I will battle against all forms of racism and sexism. I’m not really running for mayor, the thought was that if I purport to be running for mayor then this book could be viewed as election literature and would be harder to censor.

I can’t sing enough praises for Yaks, and getting the Russian children to build Yaks was perhaps the best move Stalin ever made. Yaks outperformed both the Messerschmitt Bf 109’s and Focke-Wulf 190’s and ended German air supremacy over Russia. Stalin gave the Russian children new hopes and dreams when he got them to build the Yaks, and the Yaks these children built saved Russia from utter ruin. The Russian children were wise to not question Stalin and did what he told them to do, many grew up and became alcoholics. Saskatoon should open doors for people of all ages to learn, to innovate and build, in the hopes that they do not become adult alcoholics like the Russian kids. Composite planes such as Yaks should be manufactured in separate buildings to reduce air quality issues in the main TIG welding building, as working with composites can become an awful mess. Stalin had the kids build Yaks out of composites in part due to the shortage of aluminum, today we can use more aluminum in the construction of the planes together with stronger, lighter and less toxic composites. Americans developed a composite wooden airplane in the late 1930’s thinking that there would be a future shortage of aluminum, which never occurred. I’m sure if Stalin were alive today he would still be building up his air-force. Funny that neither Hitler nor Stalin wanted long-range heavy bombers during WW2 (Stalin wanted Americans to provide him with the heavy bombers he failed to make). Hitler put heavy resources into developing a heavy dive bomber that never worked, into developing rockets and jets that barely assisted in his war effort, and into making a variable pitch four-blade propeller, but even if he did not waste resources on these four failed ventures, Stalin had an abundant pool of people and resources in the east that daily constructed an airforce that helped to crush Hitler. Stalin had smaller rockets that he used effectively against Hitler and did not pour resources into developing V2 style rockets during the World War. Stalin eventually invested into the larger rockets but only after he took Berlin. I would have liked to have told both Hitler and Stalin the errors of their ways but nobody listens to me anyway. Suffice to say, Stalin liked his air force and developed composite planes, like the Yak.

Resins should be chosen that give off fumes that are not so deadly… some resins are optimized for clarity, some for their ability to withstand heat, some optimized so they flex, others optimized to not vent extremely toxic fumes. The composite planes, such as the Yaks, have better performance due to their better streamlining. Some people will happily deal with the stink and the mess of working with the composites in order to benefit by ending up with a plane that has superior performance, such as the Yak. Instead of somebody like Stalin forcing the kids to work with composites, the kids in Saskatoon are more likely to willingly embrace the venture if given an opportunity. And besides, many of the kids in Saskatoon have no sense of smell as they stink like dirty ashtrays anyway.

Airplanes and boats require engines and people will be given space to rebuild engines, start by TIG welding a stand that holds your engine (and loose parts) off the ground so you may roll the engine out of the secure storage locker and work on it in the appropriate room given the task at hand. Give each engine a secure storage space so the owner may keep his or her engine secure when they are not present to work on it. Airplanes require slower revving engines than the typical car engine, done to prevent propeller tips from going supersonic. Motorcycle engines may be adapted for use in both boats and airplanes. Rebuilding engines can be costly, numerous people may be starting rebuilds that they are not going to complete in a timely fashion and so will likely require the engine storage lockers for years. Some people may start rebuilds and then discover their engine block is damaged and unusable. People will have to TIG weld new intake and exhaust manifolds and modify their engines in additional ways should they desire to adapt them for aviation. An automobile V8 can be used without a weighty and undesirable Propeller Speed Reduction Unit bolted onto it by maximizing the stroke of the engine while reducing the valve size and while using an appropriate camshaft (see YouTube Video “Homebuilt Airplane Episode 3: Engine Planning”).

Allow people to rebuild engines that are not suitable for airplanes as the engine could always be used in a boat, and besides they will learn skills that may later be applied to aviation engines. It isn’t up to the city to provide people with parts so they may fix their engines, but the city should provide secure space and encouragement. Many in-line water-cooled 4 or 6-cylinder car engines could prove to be adaptable for either single-engine or multi-engine homebuilt planes. Small block Chevy V8 engine blocks and heads are available in aluminum, cast iron Pontiac V-8 engines (starting in 1955) are lighter than most other cast iron engines. The V-6 engines tend to be lighter than V-8 engines and may be available in aluminum. The trick seems to be to modify the valve timing and minimize the valve size, and perhaps maximize the stroke, in order to slow down the engine adequately so that it can drive a propeller without the use of a Propeller Speed Reduction Unit. Saskatoon’s new Aviation Department would know all about it and would be able to help guide the builders with their choice of engine and parts. There are no reasons why we can’t be manufacturing small radial or small horizontally opposed or even small jet engines for ourselves. Some people will want some space to rebuild an old one-cylinder motorcycle engine, others may want a space so they may build an engine of their own design, hopefully the city could provide the space and people can unite and purchase the machining tools they require.

People working together can accomplish much, we should endeavor to get people to work together to accomplish new transportation goals. My thought was to provide an environment conducive to allowing people to innovate, and an environment that allows those who do not invent and who do not innovate to contribute to the construction of proven aviation and other transportation designs.

There are “kit” planes and there are “plans built” planes. We can quickly begin production of planes if we can decide upon one or more of the existing proven designs of the “plans built” planes. Some builders may chose to go the kit plane route and have many components trucked to the Aviation Department’s facilities, and other builders can see how these aircraft are engineered and witness their assembly. The citizens of Saskatoon could get together and start building planes without having support of the mayor nor the city councilors nor of any other people holding political office whether provincially or federally. Groups of people getting together and co-operatively building planes is a realistic goal, and we should work towards the change of laws to allow for greater freedom to fly our creations. Even if the builders choose to not build the plane co-operatively but instead each build their own airplanes, others will benefit by being able to see the steps required in the construction of that particular model of aircraft. And so both “ plans built” planes and “kit planes” may be constructed at the Aviation Department’s facilities, either by individuals or by co-operative groups of individuals, and yet other people will build aircraft of their own designs, either individually or co-operatively, and every aspect of this may be witnessed by the other builders, and usually through windows in hallways and walkways, windows located at coffee shops and windows at the many places for people to sit and observe the projects. Due to the nature of the projects, sometime builders would retrieve a portion of their project from a secure storage locker and resume work upon it in the metal working and welding facility, or in the wood working facility or in the composite and resins facility, some people would graduate to having their own narrow workshop that is large enough for their fuselage and/or wings, in all circumstances the public would be able to watch the progress from behind glass. There should be little need to provide separate facilities for the vaccinated and the unvaccinated, as the vaccinated are dropping like flies, the injection has damaged their heart muscles and they no longer have the energy to build an aircraft or some kind of other vehicle, and in many cases no longer have the energy to go look at somebody’s project. Or perhaps the “vaccinated” like to take extreme risks and would be more apt to build and fly helicopters.

People may build their planes individually or may build them as a group, or a combination of these options. For example, 100 airframes can be constructed as a group effort by 100 people, and then chosen by lot. Once you have your own airframe then complete it yourself with your own choice of engine, avionics and landing gear… less costly options can be chosen to complete your plane. If you are not flying at night then you don’t require to purchase and install them blinkin’ lights. If you only desire to land on snow or water then you don’t require wheels. Consider manufacturing a seat that fits your personal physique.


Twenty-Six Build Options:

Build Option One - TIG weld a Boat: Build a boat rather than an aircraft as your first major project as it will likely be easier for most people to complete, but build with the use of TIG welders so you may be more confident should you choose to build an airplane at a later date. Builders will be encouraged to manufacture one of perhaps a dozen different boat designs, including a small landing craft that includes a small heated cabin and is capable of transporting either a Mini-Truck-Sized Vehicle, a seadoo, skidoo or an ATV. Also TIG weld a raft to pull behind your boat. If you are navigating a long distance you would need to pull a raft loaded with fuel and other supplies. Builders would be allowed to store their finished boats and rafts in a secure facility, and the city might consider having a program to assist the new boat owner to transport him or herself, together with the boat, to and from a northern lake. Build the boats so they may transport one or more of the vehicles being constructed in Build Options 8, 9 and 10.

Build Option Two - TIG weld an Aircraft: TIG weld and machine a combination of aluminum, stainless steel and/or titanium parts for your planes, after the smaller parts are manufactured then the builder will be provided space to construct the larger TIG welded air frame. If the builder desires a titanium airframe, then the builder will be improving their titanium welding skills by making a few small titanium parts for their plane, such as a titanium oil reservoir. Consider building a powerful, strong and light weight STOL (Short Take Off and Landing) airplane or a scaled-down Consolidated Catalina, or some other aircraft that is a suitable design to be built using a TIG welder.

Build Option Three - Composite Aircraft Option: Composite planes may be built primarily out of wood, fiberglass and/or carbon fiber, perhaps using the same construction techniques used to manufacture the de Havilland Mosquito. The Mosquito’s fuselage was built in two separate halves, a left side and a right side, and then united. Some TIG welded parts will still be required. See “Mosquito Construction” by the Calgary Mosquito Society on YouTube, and “Mosquito: A Pictorial History of the DH98” by Philip Birtles.

Build Option Four - TIG weld a Trailer: TIG weld a trailer for hauling your vehicle. As with the other projects, trailers will be constructed by first building the smaller components and storing them in secure lockers before granting room to construct the complete project in a secure building booth. In lieu of a trailer, participants may instead choose to TIG weld a deck for the back of their truck that lifts and lowers their boat, plane or other vehicle into place. This option is not for people to build camping trailers, but to build flatdeck trailers or specialized trailers for hauling boats, planes, small trucks and ATV’s.

Build Option Five - Rebuild an Internal Combustion Engine: Rebuild any internal combustion engine. Blueprint, balance and assemble matching pairs of engines for use in your twin-engine boat or plane. TIG weld a few manifolds for your engines. Likely some machining will be conducted off-site due to lack of required machining tools. The city should be providing secure space for the projects, it is up to the builders to provide both materials and tools.

Build Option Six - TIG weld Containers: Fabricate aluminum, stainless or titanium gasoline tanks, diesel fuel tanks, water tanks, alcohol or oil tanks that fit your particular truck, car, boat, raft, aircraft, ATV, motorcycle, bicycle or trailer. Fabricate a tank for compressed air that fits a selected spot on your vehicle such as inside the C-Channel frame of your vehicle. Make yourself a titanium whiskey flask. Make a secure tank to haul your drinking water, another secure enclosure that holds bags of food, another secure enclosure that holds your cleaning products… Build pontoons or other floatation devices for your small truck or aircraft.

Build Option Seven - Tracks and Skis: Manufacture tracks for the front and rear of your four-wheel drive vehicle. Or manufacture tracks for the rear of your rear-wheel drive vehicle and manufacture skis for the front wheels. Or manufacture electrically powered front tracks for your rear-wheel drive vehicle, effectively turning it into a four-wheel drive vehicle.

Build Option Eight - Small Trucks: The Japanese made small and light 4-wheel drive Suzuki trucks that are suitable for adding four light weight tracks, these light weight vehicles appear to be able to drive over any depth of snow. Manufacture a vehicle similar to these Japanese vehicles, but with the same outer dimension (same width and perhaps height), so we may easily transport both the Japanese trucks and our own creations at the same time and then land them some distant port with fewer logistical issues. Having vehicles that share many parts would be a great bonus to the builders should they use their similar vehicles in a convoy for either a visit or for emigration to some distant land. Manufacture replacement parts for those mini trucks and for your tracks. Take advantage of other build options and customize your mini-truck with canisters and containers and modify the body to aid functionality (Build Option Six), or even rebuild the engine (Build Option Five).

Build Option Nine - Amphibious ATV-4: Build an “Amphibious” All Terrain Vehicle (ATV) similar to the Russian Sherp, this is a four-wheeled vehicle. Build these vehicles so they share most if not all their mechanical parts, arrange it so the convoy can easily maintain the vehicles while on the road. The larger Russian Sherp is large enough to transport a dozen people, a vehicle such as this might be large enough to transport your worldly goods should you choose to emigrate or flee to the mountains. Perhaps there would be enough interest that we could build this amphibious vehicle in three different sizes, people could choose which version to build. Then of course customize your vehicle with canisters from Build Option Six. Work on your engine in Build Option Five.

Build Option Ten - Amphibious ATV-6: Build an “Amphibious” ATV that has 6 drive wheels, with the center pair of wheels located precisely between the front and rear wheels. Build the vehicle so that it “tracks” the same as the 4-wheel-drive Sherp-like vehicle from Build Option Nine, and consider building it to work independently or as an attached trailer that helps to propel the Sherp-like vehicle from that previous build option. Different vehicles from Build Options Eight, Nine and Ten can be made to attach to one another and form a train that can travel over the swamps, tundra and mountain passes.

Build Option Eleven - Frame Stretch: Stretch the frame of your car or truck, possibly even adding a tag axel, results in superior braking, stability and greater load capacity. Or stretch the frame and then add an electrically, hydraulically or mechanically driven second rear end… if you can afford to purchase the parts, the machining and the welding supplies, then you may build it. Once you stretch the frame of your vehicle you will find room for propane tanks, custom built canisters, spare tires and such.

Build Option Twelve - Two-wheel-drive motorcycle: Build a two-wheel drive motorcycle from scratch or add an electric front-wheel drive to an existing rear-wheel drive motorcycle. Power the vehicle with either a 4-stroke internal combustion engine or with electric motors, or a combination of different motors.

Build Option Thirteen - Bicycles and Quadricycles: Construct carbon fiber, stainless steel or aluminum bicycles or quadricycles from scratch and then add the electric motors if desired. See how easy it is to TIG weld yourself some sort of peddle “bicycle” and soon you will want to TIG weld a frame for flight. Become good enough with your TIG welds and donate some of your time to the Aviation Department.

Build Option Fourteen - Go Camping: Build a tiny light weight titanium portable stove, perhaps a 2 or 3 pound wood-burning stove that collapses and fits into your back-pack with which you may heat your tent, should you go hiking or lose your home. Or build a somewhat larger but still relatively light-weight titanium stove (and stove pipe) suitable to heat larger tents and enclosures. Make a diesel heater to heat the interior of your vehicle or trailer, it vents the dangerous gasses to the outside and keeps your windows fog free. Make small alcohol burning stoves. Convert your truck or van so that it is suitable to use for camping, add shelves, closets, toilets, sinks. Make a water tank that is custom fitted to your car, truck or van. Make an electrical fence to keep bears and other predators out of your camping area.

Build Option Fifteen - Dirigible or Blimp: TIG weld a small dirigible or powered blimp capable to lifting you, your engine, fuel or batteries and a few supplies. Expect to labor on the fabric in a separate facility to reduce risks to others. Fabricate your metal parts in the metal working shops.

Build Option Sixteen - Helicopter: TIG Weld a One-Seater Helicopter. Good luck.

Build Option Seventeen - Gyrocopter: TIG Weld a Gyrocopter. Gyrocopters are far safer and easier to fly than a helicopter. Build it to accommodate just yourself or passengers as well.

Build Option Eighteen - WWI Fighter: Build a light-weight bi-plane or a light-weight tri-plane that resembles WW1 fighters, all the airplanes are to meet strict weight, power and speed requirements, all are to be equipped with paint ball guns and are used for aerial dog fighting competitions. The members could rent or purchase a section (640 acres) of farm land to periodically hold their events. These airplanes will have very slow stall speed and can also be used to hunt wild boar. As the wild boar population in Saskatchewan balloons, these aircraft, when properly equipped, would be most helpful in combating the spread of the pigs. The wild boar attack and eat people, grow to in excess of 1,000 pounds, insanity is to allow their numbers to continue to escalate while reducing people’s access to firearms while impoverishing them and reducing their mobility.

Build Option Nineteen - BD-4: Build a variation of a BD-4 airplane. These are plans-built planes that are well designed, fast, easy to build, and do not require welding. Build the BD-4 as a two-seater, or build a variation of the plane that seats four. People can snap these airplanes together in very little time, especially when working as a group. Customize your BD-4 with carbon fiber and titanium parts, fancy landing gear, clear doors, small jet or rocket engines and such. You have options, you can still use a TIG welder to build some of the components for your airplane.

Build Option Twenty - Horse-Drawn Wagons: Join with others to make a stage-coach line, or build your own wooden wagon, perhaps a gypsy wagon, covered wagon, chuck wagon or sheep-herder’s wagon. Make your own wooden wheels or make your wheels out of metal or carbon fiber. The city should provide space for such projects, space for piles of wood that are being cured, dry space to park the completed wagons, and suitable space for the teams of horses that visit the city from the rural areas. Save weight in your wooden wagons by using aluminum or carbon fiber where you desire. I’d like to see Yorath Island developed to accommodate horses (and completed wagons) visiting our city. Those cowboys and Indians who have or hope to have horses should build a bridge, a corral, a camp and a fort. Yorath Island could then be used for an old western movie set. If you can’t get your act together to build the log bridge, then ford the river. Some will use their horse-drawn wagons to transport people to and from the rural gardens, some will use their wagons to haul vegetables back to Yorath Island and to the city markets.

Build Option Twenty-One - Fabrics, Leather and Veneers: Make yourself pants that actually fit: Become proficient in making pants that fit yourself and fit your family members. Make fire resistant pants for the people building aircraft or other projects. Find poorly dressed psychiatric abuse victims and make them pants that fit as well. Become proficient in working with cloth, leather and wood veneers (required for all the aircraft, boats, mini-trucks, ATVs, dirigibles, blimps, trailers, helicopters and horse-drawn wagons). Make a tent that can accommodate a wood-burning stove. All space provided will be conducted away from the major build options in order to reduce fire and other hazards.

Build Option Twenty-Two - Go Mining: Tig weld a water pump, construct it out of a combination of titanium and steel, attach it to a 24-volt motor, build another and attach it to an internal combustion engine. Build another as a backup. Build another with somewhat greater or lesser capacity, use 4-cycle engines from broken down lawn mowers to run your water pumps and to charge your batteries for your electrical water pumps. Turn every broken down lawnmower you can find into a water pump or for another mining use. Build a small wash plant that includes a conveyor belt, trommel and sluice. Build wind and water turbines to run that water pump, maybe have the electrical capacity capable of powering the conveyor belt and trommel as well. Everything fits into a vehicle (and/or trailer) the size of a Japanese mini-truck, or onto a small trailer capable of being pulled by such a vehicle. Or eschew the Japanese mini-trucks and small trailers and use instead full sized trucks (half tons and one tons or larger) and larger trailers. Also build a shaker table and a centrifuge and try to find space for them on your truck or trailer. Build a water purification plant to supply drinking water for yourself, and build a water filtration system to provide clean water for your trommel, sluice and other mining equipment. Build shaking screens or spinning trommels to classify material by size, then batch process like-sized materials down your sluice or centrifuge. Build conveyor belts to send material to and through your gold and mineral processing plant, make them light and small enough so they may be transported upon your mobile wash plant (truck or van pulling a trailer). Put together a 24-volt off-grid electrical system for your truck or trailer, and build it in such a way that people may temporarily pair up and combine their 24-volt electrical systems into 48-volt systems and thereby supply power in greater amounts and to greater distances. Some areas that permit mining require that your pump and hoses are a maximum of one and one-half inches in diameter, equip your mining van or truck and trailer to have a sluice that will function with such a small water pump, and make wider sluices for your larger sized water pumps and hoses that can be legally used where applicable. Build shaking screens to separate gold from gravel without the use of water. Consider having two different sized belt conveyors, the small one to run with the smaller sluices and with the other smaller mining equipment. Make it easy to attach a chain to the front or back of your vehicle.

Build Option Twenty-Three - Wooden Car: Build a wooden automobile that can swim or not. Maybe build your wooden car as an amphibian that is equally at home on land as in the water. Use wood joining techniques (wooden biscuits, dovetail joints, Japanese joints…) to manufacture the wooden body. Build the body as a car or as a van or as a truck. Build this “automobile” with light weight retractable wheels, perhaps using bicycle rims. Some bicycle tires inflate to beyond 100 pounds of pressure allowing the vehicle to roll effortlessly on pavement. There is a wide range of propulsion options, including steam. You’d be using space and tools belonging to the Aviation Department which prefers you build a light weight wooden vehicle that has retractable wheels, so you can learn skills that can be later directed towards building wooden airplanes, which are in need of retractable wheels. Put your minds together and figure out ways to retract your light-weight wheels and make them strong enough to sustain a runway landing. Make carbon fiber panels or carbon fiber structural parts or metal components for your wooden vehicle in the appropriate buildings. Spruce is a recommended wood for aircraft construction and there are many Spruce trees growing here, and yet more can be grown, I imagine you can build automobiles out of Spruce.

Build Option Twenty-Four - Hovercraft: A hovercraft may go where no ATV, snowmobile, boat nor truck can go, consider building one. Consider joining with others to decide upon a set of plans and then building copies of the same hovercraft.

Build Option Twenty-Five: Build a sports car capable of driving 100 km/hour (or faster) that can deploy its wings in a second (or less), a “car” that is able to launch from a hiway (or from a rougher trail), perhaps a car that can be shot out a tube and then extends its wings after leaving the tube. Cars equipped as such require windsocks placed along hiways.

Build Option Twenty-Six: Wind powered automobiles would make sense if the government provided wider hiways and stations where people and their sail-powered vehicles can reside at while waiting for winds from the appropriate direction. Perhaps in the future your rulers may demand that you eat insects and travel in sail-powered vehicles (if your social score is high enough), and by building your sail car now you will have a jump on the future!!! Corrupted politicians are doing all they can to destroy the economies of western nations, Canada and USA are both preventing the extraction and refining of oil while importing massive quantities of oil from Islamic nations located on the other side of the world. Rather than fighting for the retention of their freedom and the retention of their nations, people are more apt to make sails for the cars and phone the police if they see somebody sneeze without a mask on. Of course all the sail-making will be conducted in a facility that is well separated from the other facilities in order to reduce fire hazards.


Goink On and On About the Twenty-Six Build Options:

People living in rental accommodations just don’t have room for such projects, nor have they room for the completed projects, and are always at risk of losing any investment they park or store inside or out. And people living under parental control also risk losing their projects at home, either by parents, siblings or others. The city should help provide space so people can learn new skills and use their time creatively and productively, and people would be more likely to utilize the facilities when they have some assurance that their projects are secure. Very young children should be allowed to start building their own aircraft and can be provided with a storage locker for their own wooden aircraft project when under parental supervision, the parents and children can have their own building location.

Store your uncompleted vehicles in secure storage lockers, roll the project out to work on it. Have another secure storage locker nearby for your boat project, yet another storage locker for your aircraft project, in each case you would be surrounded by people building similar projects. You would also have a secure storage locker in the TIG welding facilities for the aircraft parts that you are manufacturing out of metal there. If you are building a fuselage or a wing, that fuselage or wing can be placed on a rolling wall and tucked away securely while taking up very little space. Depending upon the vehicle, fuselage or the wing(s), it may be preferable to mount the projects upon rolling tables, and then tuck these away in the appropriate slots for secure storage. Perhaps with a press of a button your project and tools can roll out on rails.

Some builders, after building some parts for their aircraft, may decide that they want an alternative aircraft - these people should be able to trade the parts they thoughtlessly manufactured for the alternative parts they now require. Choices of which aircraft included in a “trading parts program” as such could be limited to a very small handful of aircraft designs, for example just support three designs: a single-seater STOL, a two-seater STOL, and a four-seater STOL. A “trading parts program” as such would help women who can’t make up their minds. For example Cindy may have initially wanted to build and own a two-seater STOL and started building the required parts, but after three months of hard work she went and changed her mind and announced to all her new intention to build and own a four-seater STOL instead. Cindy would likely flick her hair back, lightly stroke her eyebrow and giggle a little when she made the announcement. By having a “trading parts program” established, some people will feel more confident in beginning a project and can immediately jump into machining and TIG welding some of the required parts for their hastily chosen airplane project. This trading option is possible when considering that some people are building parts for credits to use elsewhere. Some people may build parts for the Aviation Department just to get experience with TIG welding and machining, or to gain in some other reward, and so periodically parts would come available to the builders and likely the builders of each particular airplane would have to draw for the particular parts that were manufactured by people who had no intention of completing the project for themselves. The person who machined and welded a part hadn’t yet made up his or her mind which airplane they should own.

The Aviation Department could approve a small handful of different designs of aircraft that could participate in a “trading parts program” (three different STOLS, perhaps three different amphibious aircraft as well). Likely Cindy fingered that if she built a four-seater STOL she would end up working closer with Steve (a handsome young feller), who was building one as well. Later Steve would abandon his project in order to get away from Cindy, no doubt. Steve’s work would not be in vain for with this “trading parts program” he can obtain some of the parts he requires for his new project, either a one, two or four-seater amphibious aircraft, or a one or two seater STOL. People who come to the facilities may not desire to build an aircraft, but only desire to improve their welding skills, and they would be making components for these 3 different STOLS and 3 different amphibious aircraft…. build either a one, two and four seater STOL, or build a one, two or four-seater amphibious aircraft, and maybe get some parts from people practicing their welding skills.

The Aviation Department should be in charge of administering the security of Build Options One through Nineteen while the cowboys and girls involved in Build Option Twenty would oversee their facilities separately. The people working with cloth, leather and wood veneers in Build Option Twenty-One would conduct their affairs in separate facilities but will have their facilities operate under the direction of the Aviation Department, which is in vital need of materials made of cloth, leather and wood veneers. The people building mining equipment (Build Option Twenty-Two) are in need of tools and secure storage lockers, and again will be operating under the oversight of the Aviation Department, which is in need of gold so that it can purchase other metals. Many airplanes are built from wood, allowing people to make wooden amphibious cars in Build Option Twenty-Three would build their skill set and may result in them desiring to build an airplane as their following project, and again the Aviation Department would provide the secure facilities.

Anybody building composite planes or composite wings, and people involved in painting and gluing, will conduct their affairs in separate facilities designed to handle the stink and the mess. The senior aviators in Saskatoon’s Aviation Department may eventually develop planes of our own designs and turn those designs into easy-to-build kits (which will generate income). Other communities will desire to partner with Saskatoon’s Aviation Department, some may offer to build parts for our use in trade for parts we manufacture here.

We should be building water taxis, such as gyrocopters with pontoons that seat between 4 to 7 people, or amphibious airplanes that accomplish the same. We should have ground effect taxis travelling just above the rivers or in other designated areas, connecting communities. We should have rocket assisted aircraft designed specifically to travel the nearly identical distance to either Calgary or Edmonton. We should have small detachable rockets designed to assist the launching of planes, and smaller rockets designed to give gliders a little push. We could have sports cars that deploy wings in a second (or less), wings that plop into play (Build Option Twenty-Five).

Ground-effect land-skimming vehicles could periodically be flying perhaps two feet above electrical wires, from which they wirelessly charge and propel themselves. Being quite flat, Saskatchewan makes the ideal testing location for these electrically propelled ground-effect land-skimming, extremely highly efficient aircraft. We could perhaps actively strive to link Saskatoon with both Calgary and Edmonton with corridors for these elevated automobiles. The Canadian prairies are ideally suited for the ground-effect land-skimming vehicles.

We should be building a prototype of a composite single seat mono-wing airplane (such as a Yak), as the cost per composite aircraft could, depending upon materials used, be lower than constructing TIG welded airframes. Reduce the cost of the airplanes to make them an achievable goal to work towards. We could reduce the cost of the aircraft by covering concrete, wood, plastic or styrofoam forms with cheap and easily available spruce plywood. Some people may choose to reduce costs further by making their own glues and by using scraps of used plywood they find laying in back yards and back alleys. The used scrap plywood would be reduced in thickness with a planer so that it would be light and flexible. The left side of a composite (plywood) aircraft fuselage can be pulled out of a secure storage locker and be worked upon, using such a system will allow for greater participation and a larger number of aircraft being started. Once completing one side of the airplane fuselage, the builder will be provided with a second storage locker for the other half of his or her airplane, eventually the builder will have the two halves to unite and will be provided with a larger storage locker to secure that fuselage while work on other components is conducted. See “Mosquito: A Pictorial History of the DH98” by Philip Birtles. People wanting wooden airplanes built in the fashion of the DH98 Mosquito can start by obtaining and perhaps planing the plywood. The plywood that is draped and shaped over the forms can be covered with a thin layer of carbon fiber. One may work on manufacturing many different metal parts while attempting to collect an adequate amount of scrap and perhaps free plywood for the fuselage and wings. People should consider buying and using their own cutting blades on the communally used equipment, or at least have spares available for the tools they are using. I imagine a slew of older donated metal working and wood working machines that are kept operational by people investing into their own cutting blades and drill bits and such.

We could be concurrently working upon a prototype of a TIG welded single-seat STOL (short take off and landing) airplane, in part to avoid paying a license fee to use some other person’s plans, in part so that the Aviation Department would receive a license fee if other builders chose to adopt our plans, and mostly in part so that we learn how to design and build airplanes. We could develop several different one-seater STOL airplanes and evaluate the ease of building, cost of building and performance of each aircraft. We could encourage those builders who wish to innovate and who desire to build their own design of aircraft, to build a one-seater STOL and compete with others in a competition of one-seater STOL’s, and we will see. And another window for innovation is to have a second competition where people are invited to build airplanes that resemble World War One fighter airplanes, they can be monoplanes, biplanes or tri-planes, they should have open cockpits and otherwise resemble World War One fighter planes, and people would be invited to paint the planes to match the paint schemes of the planes that flew in WW I so that the film industry can participate in this and make realistic WW I movies. Many of these innovated airplanes the participants invent could be fitted with paint ball machine guns and the builders could then engage in aerial paint ball dogfights.

If there is huge interest then we (with help from the Aviation Department) can develop a prototype of a powered glider that has an enormous wingspan. Many builders will chose to build a plans-built plane of a pre-existing design, such as the BD-4, rather than wait for the development of the prototypes. And smaller TIG welded airframes can be put together cheaply, and quite likely with fewer hours of work than required for the composite aircraft. Note that even the airplanes that are constructed primarily of wood still require metal parts to be fabricated and securely stored until the builder is ready for installing them. Many of these metal parts are cheaply constructed, people with limited resources can start by assembling these lower cost items. People should be free to decide which aircraft they wish to construct, but recognize that if you stick to a co-operative plan where several or many copies of the same plane are made, many of your construction problems will be solved. We should be providing options for people rather than taking options away.

By simply following the principles of aviation and without using complex mathematics nor wind tunnels, people may construct airplanes that fly very well (see “Flight Without Formulae” by A.C. Kermode). Consider that those people who use the complex mathematical formulas and even wind tunnels end up with airplanes that still undergo revision after revision after revision. Even little girls can fly their own planes and save other children from being abducted by gypsies (see The Girl Aviators’ Motor Butterfly by Margaret Burnham, published by M.A Donohue & Company). If the builder chooses to make such an individual aircraft, then of course the parts they manufacture cannot be traded for another design approved and actively supported by the Aviation Department.

Saskatoon requires two or three new airports on the outskirts specifically made for the homebuilt aircraft. We should not allow the homebuilt creations to fly over the city with the exception that the smaller and quieter planes should be allowed to travel immediately above the South Saskatchewan River and so through the very center of our city - planes could even be launched from a slipway on the roof of the TIG welding facility (a very large building located on the south side of downtown stretching from Second Avenue and 20th Street to Avenue C South and the river) and then navigate along the river. We could have races and paintball dogfights over the river, an event as such would bring visitors to the city and generate revenue. We could have a water aerodrome on the South Saskatchewan River, and perhaps limit the aerodrome to small airplanes that meet extremely tough noise limits or perhaps allow noisier aircraft to use the facilities during the day. Consider allowing the children to fly their own aviation creations at night without any licenses, and re-educating the air traffic controllers.

We could be building multiple forms, and then allowing builders to borrow our forms, and they would drape their plywood and/or fiber glass and/or carbon fiber and such over our forms, such as was done in constructing the Mosquito. While the forms are being developed the builders could rebuild engines and build propellers for their engines, build landing gear and other smaller parts. We could have forms for members to borrow that result in sleek and fuel efficient racers, like the Yak. We can also allow members to build a scaled-down version of the P-38 Lightning. We could build powered gliders that resemble a U-2 Spy Plane, we could make multiple forms for the fuselage out of concrete or some other stiff material. Small jet engines are an equivalent cost of a cheap used car, buy a pair of these small jets and make them retractable. We could even develop jet engines and make the design or parts available to the members. We can accomplish much when we work together.

We could build a fleet of amphibious aircraft, seaplanes, flying boats or perhaps even floatplanes, having a fleet of such would enable us to provide an air taxi service to the northern lakes. By facilitating the building of low cost aircraft in Saskatoon, and perhaps by building components for these airplanes in other communities, we could link northern and southern communities. Presently it costs more money to fly from Saskatoon to many communities in northern Saskatchewan, than it costs to fly from Saskatoon to Europe. Check out the retractable wing-tip pontoons on the PBY-5A, by retracting the pontoons on airplanes we will reduce drag and save on fuel.

If I were mayor of Saskatoon, I’d encourage both city residents and our neighbors living outside of our city to participate in using the proposed facilities to construct and modify boats, aircraft and ATV’s. We’d provide storage lockers for the parts you are assembling for your project, and a machine shop where you may manufacture your parts, eventually you will have enough parts stored that you would be provided with a larger secure space to assemble your project. People should have options in life, governments should be trying to help provide people with options and not take options away.

I propose a very large building along the south side of downtown Saskatoon spanning into Riversdale where visitors could travel on moving and stationary sidewalks and escalators while enclosed inside clear tubes. Visitors could safely view the airplanes or other projects being completed around them while seated and having coffee at one of the many coffee shops.

The city of Saskatoon should purchase 40, 80, 160 or 320 acres of rural land so these projects can quickly begin while building this proposed facility in the city. Even a small group of people, independent from the City of Saskatoon and who are interested in one or more of these 24 build options, can unite and pool their money and purchase the required land and erect some cheaper buildings close to the City of Saskatoon.

Build Options Eight, Nine and Ten are a system of similar tracking vehicles. The boats being built should be engineered to carry one or more of the similarly tracked vehicles from Build Options Eight, Nine and Ten, and also engineered to be easily transported by large ships. The rafts carrying supplies also need to conform to size restrictions to aid in transport by the larger ships. The boats should be loaded upon ships and then unloaded at a distant port, perhaps at the mouth of the gold-bearing Lena or some other gold-laden river. I suggest that white Canadians should flee Canada, take a well-supplied trip up the mouth of the Lena and establish a community near where a smaller river meets the Lena, where the gold or other mineral prospects look favorable, perhaps 1000 miles upstream on the Lena. Doing such would establish a community in pretty much the geographical center of Yakutia, work together to survive the first winter and then establish other communities in the region, depending upon mineral and other resources.

Bring along excavators to help dig in for the winter. Each participant should bring along thousands of pounds of food, thousands of pounds of other supplies (tents, tarps, clothes, 24 volt or 48 volt off-grid electrical systems, lithium powered hand tools, stoves, screws, books, fuel….), much of the food and supplies brought along on small boats and rafts capable of navigating the Lena River. The Yakutians are fond of metal workers, make sure to bring along your machine shops, portable lumber mills and road building equipment when you emigrate. Prepare to pay taxes to Putin in the form of gold, so that he may keep his Russian Republic strong. Or stay and pay taxes to Trudeau and have him raise your children… Trudeau uses the media and schools to teach your children to ram their penises up each other’s arseholes. Trudeau works at preventing white people from meeting, uniting and forming families, and desires control over all the children, I suggest we take all the machining tools, also the children, and flee in well-equipped convoys to Yakutia, there we can build wealth, build guns and regroup. At the very least, each participant would be required to have a raft carrying 6,000 pounds of food and other supplies so they would stand a chance to survive the first winter, and the owner of the raft would require a boat owner to tow said raft upriver. If you are bringing a vehicle on a boat or raft as well, still bring that 6000 pounds (or much more) of food and other supplies. Build the boats and rafts so they can be easily loaded onto and unloaded from the ships. Then build a community along the Lena River or nearby the Lena River, build it out of rocks and concrete on a south facing slope, build guns, mine gold, coal and other resources, regroup. Another group can land at Magadan perhaps without rafts and boats and seek out a suitable site for a community along the Hiway of Bones or nearby that hiway either in Magadan or Yakutia. Canadians can sponsor other Canadians to go on the expeditions, perhaps expecting to follow behind the following year and bringing additional resources when emigrating.

Should you find yourself landing at the Lena River Delta, travel up the Lena with a boat pulling your raft. I would suggest you also carry (or tow or use as outriggers) three or four smaller and light weight flat bottom boats so you may navigate into other rivers that you find along the way. You may need several small flat bottomed boats in order to transport your many thousands of pounds of tools and other supplies upstream an alternative river. People landing at Magadan and then travelling up the Kolyma Hiway should consider towing or carrying boats with them. Go to the expense of making aluminum containers to haul your food and other goods, so they float and so the goods are secure in transit. The aluminum containers, when empty, can always be used at your chosen destination to assist in housing and mining.

Imagine perhaps as many as one million Canadians emigrating, leaving Canada to greener pastures, each bringing with them a small fortune in dehydrated foods, and bringing with them machining equipment, and construction equipment, portable lumber mills, metals, fuels, cement and glass, and establishing new communities in places such as Norway, Sweden, Finland, Yakutia, Magadan or Kamchatka. Whichever land we emigrate to would be blessed with an economic windfall. Canadians might be wise to build boats, rafts and aircraft, in preparation of a future migration. I also imagine society will collapse so very quickly that Canadians will not have a chance to flee the messes that Biden and Trudeau are creating. In actuality America is being ruled by Obama, a homosexual Indonesian Islamist who whispers instructions into Biden’s ear, and his Queen Michelle wears size 12 men’s shoes and played football in college. It is very important to this homosexual Indonesian Islamist that Americans line up and take the jab. And Obama probably follows orders from Charles, who is an Islamist as well, while Trudeau certainly doths. Anyway, some people in Saskatoon may build Yaks and fly to Yakutia. It would be helpful to those who embark upon an expedition to Yakutia (or elsewhere) have support from airplane owners, and the airplane owners find support from those carrying supplies up roads and rivers. I image that we can establish several communities in the Russian far-east and have these communities continuously linked by air and working together developing and manufacturing airplanes, food processing and mining equipment and such.

Those people emigrating away from Canada would of course benefit by having sponsors to assist them with funds to make the boats, rafts, vehicles and to obtain the supplies. Sponsors would of course benefit when they travel to the new communities, or move to the new communities… the sponsors would have different levels of VIP status depending upon their input. I suggest the Aviation Department, which is in charge of the security of the boat building and most other build options (in charge of the secure lockers and buildings), distribute any sponsorship monies, which is likely best accomplished by the Aviation Department purchasing aluminum sheets in bulk. We will need metal lathes and presses as well but I expect people would donate some of their older and unwanted equipment, perhaps equipment in need of repair. And so likely we would be better off using any donated funds to purchase aluminum extrusions rather than invest in tools. Putin will charter us a freighter and carry us, our boats and rafts, our guns and other supplies, from Vancouver to the Lena River Delta or further upstream. Each person who constructed a raft would have a heated cabin built into their raft that they could occupy during transport. Each person who built a raft or boat using donated supplies would be obligated to use a portion of their space to transport Aviation Department supplies and equipment… and so there may be a vehicle on your raft that you do not own.

Builders who draw upon such donated resources would have to agree to use the finished boats, rafts, planes and vehicles to assist the emigration by helping to move resources for the entire group, and would later have to pay cash for any materials provided if they decide to keep the finished project for their own private use. The donations would be used for emigration, the builders drawing upon the donated materials would be beholden to the Aviation Department and would be obligated to use the constructed vehicles, boats, rafts and aircraft to assist in moving supplies to Magadan or Yakutia (Sakha Republic) or Kamchatka or Chukotka, likely depending upon which of these locations would welcome us, and depending upon what Putin would prefer. Perhaps different Russian far eastern states and regions will compete and lobby for us to establish our presence and metal working facilities at their states and regions, I suggest that you establish a settlement near some coal reserves. The Aviation Department should assist people to move to either the Russian Far East or to a Scandinavian country, or perhaps to Greenland, and so people who built rafts and are beholden to the Aviation Department would have the option to emigrate in an Aviation Department Convoy to these different locations if approved by the host country.

The raft you constructed by using materials owned and provided to you by the Aviation Department, could be half occupied by materials and by wood-working and metal-working equipment the Aviation Department is transporting to the Russian far east. People making use of the Aviation Department facilities to make rafts and other vehicles will of course be trained in some form of metal working, and so will bring their skills with them to Yakutia (Sakha Republic) should we emigrate there (more gold and diamonds and coal and there than in Scandinavia, perhaps more freedom too). Some people will construct their boats and planes with no intention of leaving the country, and so will keep their skills in Saskatchewan or another Canadian province, and would be fully responsible in funding the construction of their own projects.

If people are in the process of fleeing Canada (or the USA) and leaving independently and without the assistance of Saskatoon’s Aviation Department, I suggest you meet at Magadan and make arrangements in Magadan to travel inland and bolster an existing community, such as Atka (200 km north of Magadan), or Orotukan (300 km north of Magadan). Establish communities or bolster existing communities along the hiway running from Magadan to Yakustk, perhaps space the communties roughly 100 to 200 kilometers apart. If we had communities spaced roughly every 100 to 200 kilometers along the hiway we could assist all who travel the hiway by offering fuel, food, clothes, supplies, lodging, likely jobs and entertainment as well. If we had communities spread out along the hiway, each community could be constructing specific parts required for our communally-built airplanes, which I suggest be Short Take Off And Landing (STOL) aircraft. The parts can be delivered to Yakutsk and/or to Magadan and the aircraft can be assembled there. We can space out communites along the hiway, perhaps in or near the communities of Atka, Orotukan, Susuman, and beyond all the way to Yakutsk in the Sakha Republic, and manufacture components for our aircraft from different factories along the hiway

It makes sense to purchase land in The City of Magadan and use it to help Americans and Canadians who are in the process of emigrating to the Russian Far East. It also makes sense to purchase some land in the town of Atka to similarly assist those Americans and Canadians who are in the process of emigration, as the town is situated along the hiway and can provide lodging, meals, fuel and information to the travelers who are passing through, and is attractive due to being located close to Magadan. Also Atka boasts some nearby lakes (about five miles to the south east), making it ideal for canoeing, fishing and camping while waiting for additional members of your party to arrive from Canada or USA.

Establish communities that can serve as depots, where individual may drop off thousands of pounds of supplies and then travel the region until making a decision upon where to settle and move those supplies to. Then the Aviation Department, acting as an emigrant organization, would secure our supplies in depots in our communities along the hiway, and use our trucks to move the supplies from Magadan to any location along the hiway to Yakutsk or beyond. We could purchase land in both Yakutsk and Nizhny Bestyakh (or very nearby each community) and build boats, small aircraft and homes there. Instead of building aircraft in Saskatchewan, we can flee to Magadan and Yakutia and build them there.

Consider meeting in Sapporo Japan and make arrangement there to secure additional supplies before chartering ships and travelling onwards to Magadan. Winter weather conditions annually close the port of Magadan, while waiting for the harbor to open you can use the opportunity to shop for and buy used Japanese mini-trucks, snow mobiles and such, secure all sorts of other supplies, and charter a suitable ship to take you and the other emigrants to Magadan. I imagine a tourist office or the main police station in Sapporo can assist you to get in contact with other westerners in Sapporo who are hoping to sail to Magadan in the spring. It is possible that Putin would send a ship to Sapporo to pick you emigrants up. If I was elected as Mayor of Saskatoon, I’d encourage people to flee for their lives and go to Magadan, perhaps to first stop in Sapporo and pick up supplies. With the present state of politics in Canada, it may be wise to sell everything you have and fly to Japan where you will purchase supplies, and then in the spring board a boat in Sapporo and sail to Magadan, and then from there perhaps travel onwards to Yakutia.

People wanting to build aircraft, whether in the west or in the Russian far east, should consider making an assembly-line and rolling off copies of a commonly desired model, perhaps a flying boat that seats just four people. Another group of people will be incessant that they will each have a Short Takeoff And Landing (STOL) aircraft, and so that group would be best served by building assembly-line copies of the same plane… One seater STOL? Two seater STOL? Four Seater STOL? There may be enough interest to warrant making single, two and four seater STOL’s and rolling these three models off assembly lines. If the majority wants a four-seater STOL, the people who desire a one or two seater STOL may still manufacture what they desire, we should have the room available to accommodate people’s projects. If city has the ability to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on assorted projects of very questionable worth, and more on projects that they have no business funding, then similarly the city should be able to spend a bit of money to construct space that is suitable for you to build a project.

Put 100 people together each wanting to build the same aircraft, perhaps a one-seater STOL, this aircraft has a complex wing design. The 100 projects can be approached haphazardly with individuals constructing assorted parts of their aircraft independently from one another. Or everybody could unite and build the wings for their airplanes at the same time. Or everybody could unite and build 100 copies of the same set of wings to be drawn for after the aircraft are built. Or 20 people could unite and build the 100 sets of wings for the 100 aircraft while the other 80 people build different components for these 100 airplanes. This latter scenario would likely speed up the process of building the STOL aircraft, and 80% of the builders will not have to worry about building wings for their aircraft. Hopefully there would be enough interest to get a second set of 100 (or more) people together to build a different aircraft, and perhaps get a third group of 100 people united so they too may build 100 copies of some third style of aircraft for themselves. If you wanted an airplane and had very limited wealth, you would likely choose to join the group that seeks to make extremely cheap airplanes (likely mostly wooden and cloth) that are light weight and so can function with lower horsepower engines. Perhaps your group will cooperatively own some engines that you may borrow until you get your act together to purchase your own. There might be some smaller groups of builders, for example there may be 25 people who desire to build some plans-built airplane who do not wish to join with the other groups of people building other aircraft designs.

The city provides a room for the builders, first large rooms where all the prospective builders may meet and discuss building different designs, then smaller meeting rooms for the builders who decided upon the same design. At first the groups could make use of smaller building facilities, perhaps sharing machine shops with others groups as they manufacture parts for their own designs, then later the groups would graduate to their own larger facilities that would allow them to build wings and assemble their fuselages.

I believe many people will want to use welders to fix and customize their automobiles and trucks, we are in need of facilities for these projects that are well separated from other projects. People can start by bringing a clean vehicle that has no papers or any other materials in the glove boxes or scattered about. Then they can drain the vehicle of fuel and remove the gas tank(s), and leave their gas tanks wrapped up and outside in the empty gas tank storage location. Then they can roll their vehicle upon a movable platform, then they can remove their wheels and tires and similarly have these wrapped up and stored in an alternative outdoor storage location. Once their vehicle is stripped of paper, fuel and tires (fire hazards), and once their vehicle propped up onto a movable platform, then they may move their vehicle into the building where there will be a secure storage location for it. When they are ready to work on their vehicle they may roll it out of the secure storage and work on the vehicle, then return it to the secure storage when they are done for the day. People welding near fabric seats can remove their seats and other flammable materials and leave these items outside as well. People doing bodywork are creating dust and they can do this in a separate building, people painting vehicles would again would conduct this in a separate building. Perhaps other facilities can be made available for people to work on their vehicles without having to remove their gas tanks and tires. Rather than use the facilities to work on your vehicles, use our other facilities where you build your car from scratch, using anything from carbon fiber and other composites to aluminum, titanium and steel. Help people to innovate and create by providing encouragement and secure facilities.

When people get together in groups they can talk and share ideas and share resources and manufacture all sorts of things, people would learn metalworking, woodworking and other skills, and the entire nation would benefit as a direct result of allowing and helping people to get together and innovate. Innovation is more apt to occur without having to deal with government and their mountains of paperwork.

There are sure to be accidents and people will lose fingers or other appendages, these can be humorously pickled and placed on display as we should always make the best of our situation. Anyway Stalin was wise to give the students the option to build the composite Yaks, for those Yaks saved Russia from utter ruin. I bet the Russian kids sang songs in praise of Stalin back then, just as the Canadian kids sing praises for Justin Trudeau today.

And then again there is that issue of Cindy who isn’t quite sure which airplane to build and changes her mind, but still is able to trade the unwanted parts she built for an aircraft that she no longer desires for the parts she now requires, squeak squeak. Probababbly Cindy would originally want to build a Yak and flee to Yakutia but then changed her mind and built a STOL and fled to Finland instead, in either case Saskatoon’s Aviation Department would strive to assist Cindy to meet her desired goals, no matter how many times she changes her mind. Saskatoon’s Aviation Department would strive to assist Saskatoonian’s to emigrate to different locations, perhaps to Scandinavia or to the Russian far east, we could help send groups of people to different locations, perhaps dropping people off at the sprawling and vibrant cities of Magadan and Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy. And again at the very last minute Cindy and women just like Cindy could again change their minds and could decide to travel along with Steve to some bleak outpost in northern Siberia. Lucky Steve, it would be due to the flexibility of the Aviation Department to accommodate women like Cindy who decide at the last minute to include themselves and their equipment together with an alternative Aviation Department convoy. In the end it would be trendsetters like Cindy who would pave the way for a better future for Saskatoonians, and for people like Steve.


Other Civic Issues:

Recently administrators at the main downtown library discarded massive number of books citing that people bound to wheelchairs were unable to reach the books on the highest and lowest shelves, they decided to remove access to books that other people could reach. Over the last few decades the head librarians have been filling our shelves with material promoting witchcraft and homosexuality, this is in addition to the librarians pushing books advocating Catholic fertility rites. It costs taxpayers about a million dollars every time a single individual gets infected with HIV, but you won’t read about that in books at our libraries. The libraries are being patronized by drug addicts who have little interest in reading, and who’s presence negatively affect the learning of those who are so inclined. I do not support spending any money on a new larger downtown library, nor on spending money to annually turn the existing libraries into Catholic temples of fertility, nor on spending any additional money on new crappy books advocating Catholicism, Islam, witchcraft nor homosexuality. Nor should we be spending money on computers (and computer support technicians) for patrons to play games on, and we can save money by reducing or ceasing the purchase of adult fiction books. The library is for housing books and making these books accessible, not to cruise the internet and play computer games. We should stop spending money on paying wages for the administrators who turned our libraries into jokes. We should radically cut the budget on the libraries and find new administrators who will allow books that are critical of the Catholicism, Islam, witchcraft and homosexuality. Rather than censor Michael Rowbotham’s “The Grip of Death: A Study of Modern Money, Debt Slavery, and Destructive Economics” and even purge the record of the book ever having been at the library, we should instead buy several copies of the book. Rather than having hundreds or even thousands of different children’s books advocating witchcraft and homosexuality, we should be providing children with books that encourage independent thinking. Currently far less than 1% of the people in Canada are ramming their penises up each other’s arseholes, we should not be using taxpayer’s money to encourage the other 99% to do so. Until the homosexual / witchcraft books are removed from the children’s section of the libraries, consider carding people and preventing anybody under the age of 18-years-old from entering the public libraries, lest the city face a law suit for contributing to the delinquency of children. Children are created by a union of a man and a woman who ideally unite as a family and work together to raise these children, the public libraries (and Hollywood and the media and the churches and the schools) are being used to contribute to the delinquency of children by advocating the removal of the fathers from the lives of his children and tearing families apart. City council should recognize that the libraries have been co-opted by individuals that have very dark agendas and do everything possible to prevent additional money transfers that allow these damaging agendas to continue. Michael Rowbotham has a plan where interest-free money can be created to pay for new infrastructure (bridges, overpasses, sewers, roads, schools, libraries, aircraft factories, homebuilt aviation insurance…), it would be helpful to give the citizens of Saskatoon access to such material. This interest free money can be “created” by the City of Saskatoon to pay for any liability caused by our homebuilt aviators. At present, so-called “money” is printed by private banks out of thin air, and then loaned to the governments at compound interest, thereby enslaving us. Recently people have had access to an excessive amount of fiction and are confusing fiction for non-fiction. And then on July 17th 2020 the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix announced that the Saskatoon Public Library has appointed a Syrian sodomite who is living in Vancouver to be the new “Writer In Residence”, and so Danny Ramadan is now being paid to encourage Saskatoon’s youth to start ramming their penises up each other’s arseholes.

Over the last few decades many millions of dollars were spent just in Saskatoon to encourage people to adopt a homosexual lifestyle, now in 2020 and 2021 people are demonized if they desire to encourage children to adopt a straight lifestyle. Hollywood, the media, the churches, the schools and the libraries are all teaching your children to ram their penises up each other’s arseholes… the result is the end of white families. The Moslems have four wives and a house for each wife (paid for by your tax dollars through Saskatchewan Social Services), but the message from Hollywood, the media, the churches, the schools and the libraries is not for the Moslems to ram their penises up each other’s arseholes, the message for the Moslems is that male Moslems can now also have white wives. And there is another message being sent out, that white women can be raped and traumatized with little fear of serious consequences to the rapist.


Restoring The American Republic:

“I believe that all of those forces within our country are there to distract us and prevent us from removing the prime threat, which is globalist control of our governments. In our effort to restore the American Republic, our first priority must be regaining command and control; routing out the globalist infiltrators and their infrastructure from our land. Once we have accomplished that task and restored American command over our governments, then we can turn our undivided attention to the Mexican invasion and Islam, as well as any other force seeking our destruction.” - Thomas Mick, Restoring the American Republic, March 31 2014

“The plan of action I have proposed removes all oath breakers, starting at the local level, in order to restore our rights and liberty; returning government to the limitations the Constitution imposed on them… This plan doesn’t plead with them to stop their usurpation, nor does it seek to impeach them through the corrupt system they’ve establish that protects them; it simply calls for their removal and replacement with people who understand what the oath is and will perform their duties consistent with it. - Thomas Mick, Restoring the American Republic, April 22 2014
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