abuincelalaustrali
Chadfish is my jihad
★
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2023
- Posts
- 594
30% glowpost
@Darth_Aurelius created a thread about organising irl:
Well this is how you do it buddy boyos
Most of this stuff will be focuses on tactics, techniques and procedures. Topics covered will include first aid, survival, fieldcraft, small unit tactics, leadership, communications etc.
If you have any stuff about the related topics, or have served as a zogbot, please feel free to expand or contribute.
Setting up your gear
Individual equipment is broken down into 3 lines or layers:
Packing lists are not fixed – they are adapted to the mission, situation, enemy threat, environment. A reconnaissance patrol will be sacrifice helmets and ballistic vests in favor of mobility. A patrol in an urban area will wear full protective equipment (helmet, ballistic vest).
In jungle, hammock and tarp sleep system and gum boots are vital.
In woodland and desert, your sleep system should be a bivvy bag, sleeping bag, and foam yoga sleep mat (inflatable mats will burst).
All gear should be waterproofed in a dry bag, with a 10cm strip of duct tape on the outside of the dry bag, and the contents written in permanent marker on the duct tape.
All excess straps on webbing/packs should be taped up using duct tape or Mystery Ranch web keepers (Velcro), or cut off to save weight.
All zippers pulls should be replaced with paracord ties so you can access it with a gloved hand.
Remember that gear costs a lot, but a good set of kit can be acquired on a budget by using the following sites: eBay, facebook marketplace, facebook military/hiking gear trade groups, gumtree or your local classified site.
Note: in countries with firearms restrictions, it might be better to do away with the webbing. A belt with a safari land holster, a handgun and 2 pistol mag pouches is sufficient webbing. Alternatively, a belt loop pouch used by rock climbers to carry chalk makes for an excellent shotgun shell carrier. If you have access to an AK/AR platform with 30 round mags, it is vital to have the option to carry mags, so a chest rig or PLCE belt order is the simplest option. An armor carrier (ballistic vest) can double as a load carriage system for ammunition/IFAK. Helmets should be scrimmed like in here:
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aONa3-vDFJ0
Note: there are two types of packs on the market – civilian and military. Civilian packs include Deuter, Gregory and Osprey. Military pack brands include Source, Karrimor SF, Tasmanian Tiger, Eagle Industries, SORD Australia, Berghaus Military, Tactical Tailor, Camelback. You should at least have a double mag pouch attached to external MOLLE on your pack to facilitate the carriage of extra mags/handheld radio/field dressings. The only quality bladders are Source Hydration and Camelback. Your IFAK and first and kit are different. IFAK is a trauma kit designed to provide battlefield treatment of GSW. It includes at a bar minimum: field dressing, trauma shears and tourniquets. Only buy CAT or SOFT-T tourniquets from reliable sellers like Chinook Medical or TacMed as anything sold elsewhere will be a Chinese fake. Your IFAK is carried on your webbing. Your first aid kit is carried in your pack. Your first aid kit contains everything needed to treat injuries sustained in the field (blisters, cuts, sprains, snake bites).
Training
More important than gear is having the training. Easiest way to get training is to become an infantryman in your national armed forces. Besides that, civilians can get training through RTOs. I suggest the following for anyone: CPR certificate, Certificate III first aid, learn to shoot course, ISPC shoots, a survival course, and just general hiking. There are options available for anyone unfit for regular military service, check out the following options:
Basic patrol pack contents.
Basic helmet (scrimmed), ear protection (peltors), and safety glasses (not my picture):
Basic survival kit:
A survival kit should be part of your standard packing list, included in your webbing. For pre-bought kits, I suggest Bob cooper survival, Best Glide ASE or BCB International. Of course, most of these kits are cheaply made, so specific items must be upgraded yourself. Remove anything that is shit, and add a quality multitool (Gerber, Leatherman, Victorinox), full sized base plate compass (Brunton, Silva), and a set of evasion instructions.
Print out these evasion notes and waterproof them with plastic book wrap:
I'll post more stuff as I write it/grab pics.
Why incels should organize irl
Here are the several reasons why I feel as though we are doing ourselves all a collective disservice by not creating a real world counter-part of sorts to these virtual forums: 1. The deleterious emotional and psychological effects of inceldom are considerably exacerbated by isolation and the...
incels.is
Most of this stuff will be focuses on tactics, techniques and procedures. Topics covered will include first aid, survival, fieldcraft, small unit tactics, leadership, communications etc.
If you have any stuff about the related topics, or have served as a zogbot, please feel free to expand or contribute.
Setting up your gear
Individual equipment is broken down into 3 lines or layers:
- Clothing, contents of pockets and firearm
- Webbing (chest rig, ballistic vest, or belt kit)
- Assault pack (day pack, patrol pack)
- Field pack
Packing lists are not fixed – they are adapted to the mission, situation, enemy threat, environment. A reconnaissance patrol will be sacrifice helmets and ballistic vests in favor of mobility. A patrol in an urban area will wear full protective equipment (helmet, ballistic vest).
In jungle, hammock and tarp sleep system and gum boots are vital.
In woodland and desert, your sleep system should be a bivvy bag, sleeping bag, and foam yoga sleep mat (inflatable mats will burst).
All gear should be waterproofed in a dry bag, with a 10cm strip of duct tape on the outside of the dry bag, and the contents written in permanent marker on the duct tape.
All excess straps on webbing/packs should be taped up using duct tape or Mystery Ranch web keepers (Velcro), or cut off to save weight.
All zippers pulls should be replaced with paracord ties so you can access it with a gloved hand.
Remember that gear costs a lot, but a good set of kit can be acquired on a budget by using the following sites: eBay, facebook marketplace, facebook military/hiking gear trade groups, gumtree or your local classified site.
Clothing (line 1) | |
Boots (goretex hiking shoes, combat boots, or gum boots) | |
Socks | |
Underwear | |
Long pants | |
Long sleeve shirt | |
Giggle hat | |
Hearing protection (ear plugs or peltors) | |
Eye protection (safety glasses at bare minimum) | |
Uniform belt | |
Firearm (rifle, shotgun, handgun in a holster) with sling/holster |
Webbing (line 2) | |
Chest rig/PLCE belt order | |
Ammunition | |
IFAK | |
Other items such as navigation and administration, multi-tool, communications kit, headlamp, cam stick etc. |
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aONa3-vDFJ0
Assault pack (line 3) | |
Rain gear (goretex jacket, or nylon poncho) | |
Rations for 24 hours | |
Spare socks | |
Water in a camelback/source bladder, and/or bottles | |
Water filter and purification tablets | |
Mission specific equipment such as group med kit, extra ammunition, communications kit, spare batteries, LP/OP hide site construction materials etc | |
Field cleaning kit (bore snake, toothbrush, rag, CLP oil at a bare minimum) | |
First aid kit |
Field pack (line 4) | |
Sleep system (sleeping bag, sleep mat, bivvy bag, tarp etc) | |
Extra rations | |
Jetboil | |
Hygiene kit (wash cloth, toothbrush, toothpaste, baby wipes, foot powder) | |
Extra water | |
Spare uniform (top, bottoms and socks) | |
Tools such as wire cutters/entrenching tool/folding saw |
Training
More important than gear is having the training. Easiest way to get training is to become an infantryman in your national armed forces. Besides that, civilians can get training through RTOs. I suggest the following for anyone: CPR certificate, Certificate III first aid, learn to shoot course, ISPC shoots, a survival course, and just general hiking. There are options available for anyone unfit for regular military service, check out the following options:
- Territorial homeland defense units (Germany, Finland)
- Cadet associations
- University training schemes with no service requirement such as Officers' Training Corps (UK) or MPK (Finland) or the various groups attached to universities in Thailand/Malaysia/Indonesia
- Home guard service (Sweden, Norway, Denmark)
- Rifle associations
- First aid/firefighting/search and rescue groups
- Local militia groups. Most militia groups are full of feds/informants, and are so heavily surveilled that they’re not worth joining. Most groups are full of boomer faggots who never actually train, rather they shoot guns and drink beer. The US Oathkeepers are faggots. If the leader gives themselves a made up rank and it only has very few members, they’re faggots. If the leadership isn’t at least a former career soldier who regularly organizes training days for members, they’re faggots. If they are extremely unfit and have lots of different firearms in meme calibers, they’re faggots. If they focus on kit over training and basic logistics, they’re faggots. If they’re faggots, avoid them.
Basic patrol pack contents.
Basic helmet (scrimmed), ear protection (peltors), and safety glasses (not my picture):
Basic survival kit:
A survival kit should be part of your standard packing list, included in your webbing. For pre-bought kits, I suggest Bob cooper survival, Best Glide ASE or BCB International. Of course, most of these kits are cheaply made, so specific items must be upgraded yourself. Remove anything that is shit, and add a quality multitool (Gerber, Leatherman, Victorinox), full sized base plate compass (Brunton, Silva), and a set of evasion instructions.
Print out these evasion notes and waterproof them with plastic book wrap:
I'll post more stuff as I write it/grab pics.