Yeah i actually work there! We have one of Teddy Roosevelt’s carriages, the car FDR used, the car harry truman used, the car that JFK was shot in, and the car Reagan used.
My wife and I got a personal tour of The Beast in 2004 during the election season. We were attending a Wilderness First Responder training at Buckley AFB at the Civil Air Patrol’s offices there. The class was held upstairs in a very large early Cold War hangar. When we came in we were ushered immediately up the stairs by our instructor and told not to go onto the hangar floor. Upon topping the stairs, we saw why: the entire preidential motorcade was there under guard by one Secret Service agent sitting at a table. We had our class and afterward one of the guys in class, who was in the USAF Security Forces and happened to be in uniform as he had been on duty earlier, suggested that he approach the agent to see if we could get a tour. To our surprise, the agent agreed and they waved us down. No pics allowed. The poor agent was sick as a dog with flu but he was super nice and let us look around both of the Beasts (there are two identical cars) and swing the doors. The doors are incredibly thick and heavy as Simon pointed out. The agent told us the “glass” was something like 5” thick obviously bullet and blast resistant polycarb. Perhaps the coolest part was looking around the chase vehicles which I believe consisted of 5 Chevy or GMC Suburban type SUVs, also somewhat up armored. I could see their comm gear and MP5s stowed inside. We most definitely did not open the doors on those vehicles. The one we couldn’t look inside was the jamming vehicle that carried that goofy looking antenna on top. That one is used to jam cell phone and other frequencies to prevent remote-detonated IEDs. We asked the question... where are the keys? Expecting there to be some ultra high tech solution to “keys” we were surprised to find out that they kept the keys on the little pigtail antenna on the rear of the vehicle. The idea there, he said, is that a) the vehicles are under live guard always - even when parked in their vault at Andrews AFB - so theft isn’t a concern, and b) they never have to ask who has the keys. Maybe this is all an elaborate ruse, but that’s what he said and we could see keys hanging there. Anyway we were not permitted to sit in The Beast because, well, we are the unwashed masses and they can’t have us farting up the presidential limo, right? It was a badass experience and I thank that agent, who went WAY beyond the call of duty - especially while sick, for being so kind and showing us around.
@@dannydaw59 The Ford F-550/E-van (one w/ black dome on roof) will drive along the motorcade; only when you're on the phone, the communications will go staticky and warp your voice.
What you neglected to mention was that after the attack on Pearl Harbour, the Secret Service wanted the limo to be bullet proof. While it was being armoured, the president needed to get to congress for his iconic infamy speech. So the secret service used Al Capone’s car, which had been confiscated years earlier.
I remember when Obama came to the Netherlands, he flew in on helicopter, the whole Dutch airspace was closed off and missile batteries were on stand by to shoot any violators down. Meanwhile, our Dutch minister-president arrived... On his bike
@Mustache Merlin Depending on when this election finishes, we'll probably intervene with what's happening in Armenia and Azerbaijan. Most likely leading to even more enemies...
Well, our minister is a nobody, liked by nobody, and Obama was the leader of most powerful country in the free world. Hardly the title Rutje would be awarded. Unless you mean free as in 'gratis'.
He he ... the difference between a world leader that is hated by many people and a leader that is respected by his country. I can just say - imagine if it was G.W.Bush or D.Trump.
My toyota yaris is defended by a nest of wasps. The nest is either in the driver side mirror or under the hood, all attempts to find it end when they start swarming.
I actually have electrified door handles on my W220 S-Class.. it makes for a mildly entertaining night on the south and west side of chicago.. especially when Trump Pence 2020 decals in all the windows... Had to apply a non stick coating to the front bumper though... What better way to test Diamler's designs for pedestrian safety??
One Beast rumor I love is that when a Beast is retired, one of that series will be taken by Secret Service and they'll see what it takes to destroy it with artillery.
I'm thinking is gone by the time they get to 155mm. I'm sure it can withstand small mortar fire and maybe a couple hits from a Mk19, but as soon as they get to the 155mm, game over.
@@Ratkill9000 I mean, there's quite a bit inbetween that may be used too...I'd be curious how it would hold up to a ~25mm anti-aircraft/tank cartridges. You know the kinds of stuff ISIS/Taliban/Al Qaeda loves to strap to the bed of a Toyota Hilux and bomb around the desert. And just for funsies, how about the GAU8 and it's tank busting 30mm rounds...give it the old BRRRRT
Megaproject Suggestion. Longest deep bore ice core in Antarctica. Took years, loads of drama with it and they found some cool stuff like a fresh water lake under the ice containing previously unknown lifeforms. Would go Well with the other hole projects that are popular Speaking of deep holes, how about the Kidd Mine as well?
1:50 - Chapter 1 - A true tank of a car 2:40 - Chapter 2 - Beastial history 7:15 - Mid roll ads 8:55 - Chapter 3 - The end of the top down 10:05 - Chapter 4 - Into the modern era 11:50 - Chapter 5 - The latest beast 13:40 - Chapter 6 - Fortress on wheels
When I went to Washington D.C. for a field trip a number of years ago, I seen these “Beasts” in a motorcade. We were told it was the vice president’s motorcade bc it didn’t have an ambulance. Pretty cool to see, you’ll get maybe 5-10 seconds to see the motorcade bc it goes so fast but pretty cool to see.
'The beast comes equipped with smoke screens and oil slicks as defensive measures' Well, I guess he's safe from any cartoon characters that may want to attack
@@dclark7703 if I may, I think the ISP thing is because they host the giant servers that you connect to, so technically, if you had what they had, you wouldnt need one..it would just be pointless cuz of the money needed
Excellent overview of all the vehicles...thanks! As for an idea on a megaproject, how about the San Fransisco cable car system? I had the chance to check this out a few years back and the entire cable system is extraordinary...even the way the cars use the cable and their brakes for the insane hills. Keep us posted!
A Megaprojects suggestion: The _McDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagle,_ having first flown 48 years ago, it is still in service to this day. Outliving many other military aircraft along the way and still very highly effective. I feel it may prove of great interest, and the American part of your audience will love it.
The B52 is also a timeless aircraft and still on the top ten list of the world's most dangerous aircraft. As a young man in the late '50s and early '60s, my father would take us out near the airbase close to the runways' end to watch the B52's take off on SAC patrols. Each was armed with nuclear weapons. The A10 Wart Hog is going to be another one that will persist; it already has. I have a cousin, retired now that flew the A10's and of course, he loves them. My father, while in the "Army Air Corps," flew P51's as fighter support for the B17's bombing Germany during WWII. He also flew the P47 on missions to destroy supply trains. Of the two planes, he favored the Mustangs but liked the P47 calling it a killing machine with the 8 50s in the wings and how easy it was to drop bombs on target with the power of the P&W 2800 double Wasp to climb out of harm's way quickly.
Simon: I have a channel called business blaze, it's rarely about business though. It's fine. No need for a second channel for non-business blazes Also Simon: This project might not be mega enough. I need a second channel for it **makes Sideprojects** Also Also Simon: "Welcome to a Megaprojects that might not be a megaproject" - still puts it on megaprojects and not sideprojects You ok over there Simon?
It is almost as if he had been better off with one mega RUclips channel with separate subject playlists. LOL! His next channel will be Knitting Projects, wherein he will never, ever finish a knitting project, but go on and on about new patterns.
I think he's running low on that good old Columbian pure. He's probably rationing it so he only has so much organizational work he can do in one day. Allegedly...
There were a few instances bouncing between Cadillac and Lincoln where it wasn't quite right. I'll give it a pass because the videos are always great, and mistakes will happen.
And focus part of the video on the whole conspiracy part. Like the Americans wanted it's Titanium for the Lockheed A-12, and in fact ended up with Lockheed.🤔
That's one of the cool things about living near Washington DC. I have seen several motorcades with various Presidents going by all over this area. I also worked downtown and was walking to work and passed within 2 blocks of where Reagan was shot - AS HE WAS BEING SHOT. I had no idea what was going on as all the action happened after I walked by (there was so much noise bouncing off the buildings I never heard anything unusual). It was interesting to see the changes around the area when I walked back to the Metro after work.
I have so many suggestions for a Megaprojects video, I have a passion for History in general, and Historical Buildings and Bridges, I love watching the American Experience series, I would like to suggest 1) The Rise and Fall of Pennsylvania Railroad Station in New York the most, or 2) Grand Central Station or the 3) Brooklyn Bridge, or lastly for now..lol, the 4) World Trade Centre Twin Towers, which ever you believe would be most popular for your viewers.
Living in DC I see the beast quite a bit, when I worked in Dupont I would see Chaney every day in it flying up Conn. Ave to his home. It's a pain living here sometimes, in other cities you don't have the "I'm late because of a motorcade" problem.
You should do a video on The Beast (Roller Coaster) at Kings Island. It is the world’s longest wooden roller coaster coaster and has been for over 40 years. It’s a very large and interesting wooden structure.
When I turned 16, I went to DMV in Florida to take the test and get my drivers license. When I was paying for it, the girl at the counter explain to me that they had just started with separate motorcycle driver licenses and as there was no test as yet, I could have one for $4 more. Which I did. Moving to four other states and now another country, each DMV passed on my motorcycle licenses as I already had one. So now owning and driving motorcycles for over 45 years without knowing how to parallel park them. ;-).
definitely a Megaproject for the amount of work that that's gone into the evolution and design over the years. topic suggestion for a Megaproject? nanotech.
no pun intended actually. the advances and work that's gone into nanotech over the last few decades in unreal. molecular sized machines manipulating individual atoms? bloody amazing.
That was a 2006 edition from the Bush era. The 2009 version vehicle would not have got stuck. They switched and started commercial medium duty class 6 truck chassis. The protection demands became so high that they had to stop using heavy duty consumer pick up truck platforms and switch to commercial medium duty platforms. You’re looking at a vehicle that is a bit more than twice the weight of Bill Clintons 1993 Cadillac Fleetwood.
@@andrewday3206 it was actually , they brought it over specifically for the visit and we had to listen to them going on and on about how great all the American security and equipment was, thats why it was so hysterically funny !
The Quabbin Reservoir may not be the biggest, but when it was conceived & built in the early 20th century it definitely had an impact. Insuring a stable water supply for greater Boston meant clearing 4 small towns out of the way, right down to the cemeteries. You should consider doing this as a video soon.
It was not a switch back to General Motors from Cadillac! Cadillac is owned by General Motors so saying that it switced back to GM from Cadillac doesn't make sense. The Chassis of the Beast is actually a GMC Top Kick/ Chevy Kodiak truck.
@@lordgarion514 That doesn't really matter. The cars that GM provided for the president have been Cadillacs. So the statement that it "switched back to GM from Cadillac" still doesn't make sense.
@@Rascofresco11 A 3500 general motors Silverado chassis could not handle the armor requirement and the weight. Think Silverado 6500 medium duty commercial truck. Similar to the Topkick GMC 5500s. Just more GVWR rating and suspension enhancements such as airbags for ride quality.
I love the way you say “military grade’ as a positive. I can tell you military grade means cheap, not actually going to save someone’s life because all governments take military contracts to the lowest bidder. Rockhound from Armageddon has a great quote.
An often misunderstood concept. There's no such thing as "military grade." There's military spec, which just means the military lists a requirement and the item either meets it or it doesn't. As for the "made by the lowest bidder" BS, yes, the military will buy the least expensive thing that does what it needs to do. You don't drive a Veyron, do you? I mean, it's a great car, but it it worth it to own one if you never need to drive faster than 90mph? That doesn't mean that less expensive cars aren't good. In most cases they're better. Better for hauling the kids around, picking up groceries, etc. You know, the things you actually need a car for. Yes, the military could bankrupt the country by building just one incredible fighter, that they'd then never be able to use for risk of losing it, and it wouldn't be able to do as much as ten less expensive jets. But it makes more sense to look at the task at hand, decide which tool you need to accomplish that task, then buy the required number for as little as possible. Because the tasks the military has are usually far more difficult than the average organization would ever have to deal with, the specs the military has for those tools are usually quite stringent. So yes, "military grade" usually means "The least expensive version of this really good thing."
Been driving sticks since 2008 and no, I do not miss automatics. It does have an advantage: if your wheels keep spinning on snow or gravel, you can just use second gear to get the car moving even if you don't have traction control.
@@largol33t1, they do have a few advantages like that, but I think the real reason I'm so fond of them is because they make any vehicle more fun to drive, more engaging, more interesting. My Mazda3 is no sports car, but I have a blast behind the wheel of it. Downshifting in preparation for overtaking a slow driver, confusing the person behind you at a stop light when you take your foot off the brake but don't start moving, and hitting that perfect rev-matched downshift with the heel-toe action on an off-ramp corner help to prevent the 10 hours a week I spend in commute (before covid anyway) from giving me the urge to suck-start a 12ga.
I'm a trucker and run my own truck now. One of the main criteria of mine for finding a truck was it must be manual. So mine is. It's a 13 speed. I love it being manual.
@@RedbikemasterI had to look that up. I was confused that the number of gears was both odd and Prime. At first glance there has to be a better way to designate the gears, rather than High Range/Low Range with each gear in the High Range having it's own High and Low. (Assuming 13 Speed Eaton transmission.) I bet once I got used to it, I'd probably have a lot of fun with it though.
@@chaseweeks2708 it makes sense with the way they're built. You start with a 4 speed with Lo. Then you split that, it's a 9 speed (you don't use Lo with the splitter set to high). Then, you split the high side. Now you're at 13. If you split both low and high sides, you get an 18 speed. It's a bit of a learning curve but it's satisfying to operate once you're used to it. It being prime is just coincidence lol
I’ve always had a sneaky admiration for the massive soviet-era square-cut ZIL limos, which appeared to be based on 1970s Detroit land yachts. Moscow even had dedicated ‘ZIL lanes’ so the party leaders didn’t have to share the roads with the hoi-polloi.
Two Megaprojects Suggestions: 1. The BLM Helium Reserve. The US Government operated a massive helium reserve in Texas due to their strategic interest in Helium as a resource (critical for Cryogenics including MRIs, Research, Magnets, Fiber Optic Manufacturing, Welding, Scuba diving and Leak Detection). 2. Formula 1 Cars. No, they're not as durable as the Beast, but it takes several billion dollar companies with hundreds of employees each to build 2-4 cars per year, and the crash structures designed to protect a driver from a 200+MPH collision and survive are very much what I would consider a "Megaproject."
Hey Simon! As a car enthusiast and someone who has enjoyed your videos on military projects, I really enjoyed this. Have you considered covering other cars? I think the McLaren F1 would make a great subject. A British company that never produced a road car creating the world’s fastest car seems like a megaproject to me!
Idea for a ‚Megaprojekt‘ video: the World Scout Jamboree - An international scout camp happen every 4 years in a different country, where more than 40‘000 kids from all over the world meet... the planning and organizing of this event are largely done by volunteers over multiple years. I think that’s quite an interesting mega project!
I was active duty USAF military officer detailed to support President Reagan’s team when he was at Ranchi Del Cielo. It was because of the decision to fly and not drive him for “local” visits. The decisions to fly came from one of his early trips via motorcade from his mountain top ranch. The ranch, Rancho Del Cielo, is high up in the mountains north of Santa Barbara, Ca. The road to and from the ranch is a typical mountain roadway, a twisting, winding two lane narrow road. After a trip down from the ranch, the motorcade vehicles had used up most of their breaks, largely because the vehicles were just so damned heavy. So they decided to fly the President, via helicopter rather than using ground transport. This may give you an idea as to just how heavily armored and equipped the Presidential vehicles are. Thank you for this video.
Ha ha, I've been there years ago. First thought: I know that, why did they choose that place for traffic. But it makes sense somehow. :-) It's a really beautiful city you are living in!
As a side note, another documentary detailed the 24 hours after the Pearl Harbor attack. One item discussed was that the secret service used Al Capone's car (impounded earlier) to deliver FDR to the capitol building to deliver his "Infamy" speech.
The car Kennedy was in is at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan (just outside of Detroit, Michigan) along with four other presidential cars and the chair Lincoln was sitting in at Ford Theater. If you are ever in the Detroit area I highly recommend the Ford Museum.
The reason why there are many presidential cars and why they take them to state visits in foreign countries is that the President and his staffers need a secure place to discuss the issues without any fear they will be bugged. These vehicles are guarded so that no unauthorized person can get anywhere near them. Many times the cars just sit inside the cargo aircraft waiting for use, they don't even take the cargo straps off them. Keeping them inside the plane also isolates the car from laser listening devices. Another interesting item of note is that the President has a pusher diesel RV fully equipped to Secret Service specs.
YES, I’ve been waiting for a mega project about a car. Suggestion, you could do a lot of mega projects about famous race cars or super cars. For example looking into the engineering of the Bugatti Veyron or something similar to that.
Now that we're on to cars, can we have the Bugatti Veyron in the near future? Pretty sure it's a megaproject of its own, as it's basically Volkswagen AG's peak tech demo
Its funny, when I was a child, President Esinhowerr and his wife Mamie use to visit close family friends in our town in the Summer. Their trip would only be known to the town AFTER he left, they came and went in a four-door plain chevy with just two Secret Service agents. He flew quietly in and out of Hanscom field in Bedford Massachusetts, for the 45 minute drive to the North Shore town of Marblehead. .
Simon, thanks for presenting that MEGA, doesn't mean just big, but also complex or ultra important. BTW, according to recent studies (and behavior) there is no current armor thick enough to match the thickness of our sitting president.
My uncle Charles F Bersch also worked on one of the presidents limo’s. After Kennedy was shot he was part of a project that developed, to my understanding, the first bullet proof glass. This was right around the time I was born and didn’t even hear of this until I was an adult. I’d love to share more but I don’t know the facts well enough.
@@frankvadnais3536 think my grandfather worked in carters, I have a model at my house but I'm not there right now. Ill try and find it when i get home. Think it had the presidents name
Do the US electrical grid, specifically the rural electrification project! By some measures, it's the largest machine on earth. Imagine a new technology today that would require modifying every single house in the US. Definitely a megaproject
I wondered about that, so I paused and Googled it. Type "fdr and al capone's Cadillac; truth or myth" into your search window and find the story was complete fiction; Capone's car was a 1928 Caddy, FDR's was probably a 1940 Cadillac. Besides, Capone's car was in the UK from 1933 until 1958. I was hoping the story was true; how about you? It would certainly be a nice turnaround! Stay safe.
Giving away the details of this car and showing all of its hidden features in my opinion is cool information for U.S citizens but also helpful information for terrorist or any enemy.
I worked at a GM dealership outside of DC for a while. Never worked on the beast but I did work on several armored Cadillacs and armored Suburbans for the Secret Service. Yes they are extremely heavy
For years I thought all zoos were free to get into because the Zoo st Louis Missouri is free but its only like one of 2 ,whoever founded it set up massive trust to keep it free forever ,is san Diego the other one
Check out Brilliant: brilliant.org/Mega
Can you do one on the interstate system of the USA
Maybe after the interstate video could you sprinkle in the suspension bridge in Waco texas?
Enjoyable but half baked. Surely you could have done more research and given a more thourough report. But thanks for your vidja.
No you check it out!
I am hoping you cover the fact its sealed so say someone had an airborne virus the others in there get a bit exposed
"miles per liter", because Simon wanted to piss off the metric and Imperial measurement crowd at the same time
making one group angry was not enough
Now simon needs extra armor on his car aswell
I've never heard "miles per litre" before but some of us Brits have a habit of using both systems.
@@fikkie4277 indeed, imperial and metric folks combined are dangerous
As metric users I'm quite used to removing roughly a third to change miles to km with head calculations
Fun fact: Most of these vehicles from TR's to Reagan's can be seen at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan
Yeah i actually work there! We have one of Teddy Roosevelt’s carriages, the car FDR used, the car harry truman used, the car that JFK was shot in, and the car Reagan used.
Wasnt very fun though, more like Fact:
@Bakamalian what was the fun element?
@Bakamalian yes museums are fun.
But what was fun about that fact?
@Bakamalian just like your mum
My wife and I got a personal tour of The Beast in 2004 during the election season. We were attending a Wilderness First Responder training at Buckley AFB at the Civil Air Patrol’s offices there. The class was held upstairs in a very large early Cold War hangar. When we came in we were ushered immediately up the stairs by our instructor and told not to go onto the hangar floor. Upon topping the stairs, we saw why: the entire preidential motorcade was there under guard by one Secret Service agent sitting at a table. We had our class and afterward one of the guys in class, who was in the USAF Security Forces and happened to be in uniform as he had been on duty earlier, suggested that he approach the agent to see if we could get a tour.
To our surprise, the agent agreed and they waved us down. No pics allowed. The poor agent was sick as a dog with flu but he was super nice and let us look around both of the Beasts (there are two identical cars) and swing the doors. The doors are incredibly thick and heavy as Simon pointed out. The agent told us the “glass” was something like 5” thick obviously bullet and blast resistant polycarb. Perhaps the coolest part was looking around the chase vehicles which I believe consisted of 5 Chevy or GMC Suburban type SUVs, also somewhat up armored. I could see their comm gear and MP5s stowed inside. We most definitely did not open the doors on those vehicles. The one we couldn’t look inside was the jamming vehicle that carried that goofy looking antenna on top. That one is used to jam cell phone and other frequencies to prevent remote-detonated IEDs.
We asked the question... where are the keys? Expecting there to be some ultra high tech solution to “keys” we were surprised to find out that they kept the keys on the little pigtail antenna on the rear of the vehicle. The idea there, he said, is that a) the vehicles are under live guard always - even when parked in their vault at Andrews AFB - so theft isn’t a concern, and b) they never have to ask who has the keys. Maybe this is all an elaborate ruse, but that’s what he said and we could see keys hanging there.
Anyway we were not permitted to sit in The Beast because, well, we are the unwashed masses and they can’t have us farting up the presidential limo, right? It was a badass experience and I thank that agent, who went WAY beyond the call of duty - especially while sick, for being so kind and showing us around.
Interesting story. I didn't know about the jamming vehicle. I wonder what it does to people's mobile phones when they film the motorcade going by.
@@dannydaw59 it jams calls or transmission of information not other uses like taking a picture
@@dannydaw59 The Ford F-550/E-van (one w/ black dome on roof) will drive along the motorcade; only when you're on the phone, the communications will go staticky and warp your voice.
Good thing he wasn't in the vehicle with the president! Its like the inverse square of trump and his agents.
The Suburbans are collectively referred to as BATTLE WAGONS.
My car also comes with deployable smoke screens and oil slicks....except in my case it’s from a leaking head gasket.
What you neglected to mention was that after the attack on Pearl Harbour, the Secret Service wanted the limo to be bullet proof. While it was being armoured, the president needed to get to congress for his iconic infamy speech. So the secret service used Al Capone’s car, which had been confiscated years earlier.
Has nothing to do with the presidents car weetodd
I remember when Obama came to the Netherlands, he flew in on helicopter, the whole Dutch airspace was closed off and missile batteries were on stand by to shoot any violators down. Meanwhile, our Dutch minister-president arrived... On his bike
@Mustache Merlin Depending on when this election finishes, we'll probably intervene with what's happening in Armenia and Azerbaijan. Most likely leading to even more enemies...
Well, our minister is a nobody, liked by nobody, and Obama was the leader of most powerful country in the free world.
Hardly the title Rutje would be awarded. Unless you mean free as in 'gratis'.
He he ... the difference between a world leader that is hated by many people and a leader that is respected by his country. I can just say - imagine if it was G.W.Bush or D.Trump.
that kinda security is necessary for a man whose index finger is on a button connected to 6000 nukes ready to go
@@kimi17171 Yes. I believe they are protecting the ever present nuclear football as much as the man himself.
The Beast... And I thought we were finally getting a video about Simon's beard
If only this was a Mega Projects video, sponcered by Business Blaze.
Simp
😂😂😂 Award for Best Comment 🏆
Talking about historical MegaProjects, lol much
I mean his beard looks pretty classy
My toyota yaris is defended by a nest of wasps. The nest is either in the driver side mirror or under the hood, all attempts to find it end when they start swarming.
I actually have electrified door handles on my W220 S-Class.. it makes for a mildly entertaining night on the south and west side of chicago.. especially when Trump Pence 2020 decals in all the windows... Had to apply a non stick coating to the front bumper though... What better way to test Diamler's designs for pedestrian safety??
@@fadingbeleifs 💀💀💀
@@fadingbeleifs Some people just want to watch the world burn...
You should probably take it to the shredders at the metal recycling plant.
They are doing you a favor.
I thought the first armored car used for a setting president was confiscated from Al Capone for FDR after Pearl Harbor
One Beast rumor I love is that when a Beast is retired, one of that series will be taken by Secret Service and they'll see what it takes to destroy it with artillery.
I'm thinking is gone by the time they get to 155mm. I'm sure it can withstand small mortar fire and maybe a couple hits from a Mk19, but as soon as they get to the 155mm, game over.
@@Ratkill9000 I mean, there's quite a bit inbetween that may be used too...I'd be curious how it would hold up to a ~25mm anti-aircraft/tank cartridges. You know the kinds of stuff ISIS/Taliban/Al Qaeda loves to strap to the bed of a Toyota Hilux and bomb around the desert. And just for funsies, how about the GAU8 and it's tank busting 30mm rounds...give it the old BRRRRT
Yep, started that with Dubya Bush limos and later. Read an article on it when Obama beast appeared on the scene.
@@jon2914 I'd pay to see an A10 do a run pass it. Might as well do a Brandley chain gun, Ma deuce, some Russian 12.7x108mm.
No need for artillery. A hit with a regular RPG-7 grenade with cumulative charge should rip through it like a knife through cake.
Megaproject Suggestion. Longest deep bore ice core in Antarctica. Took years, loads of drama with it and they found some cool stuff like a fresh water lake under the ice containing previously unknown lifeforms. Would go Well with the other hole projects that are popular
Speaking of deep holes, how about the Kidd Mine as well?
@drew pedersen *Shoves pencils up nostrils and underpants on head*
Wibble, wibble, wibble, wibble.
@drew pedersen 😂😂😂😂😂👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Speaking of deep holes, how about Hilary and Nancy WOW EXTREME DEEP HOLES........
@@youtubecreator950 Anal probes on standby Captain. Setting them on Fun.
@@anarchyantz1564 too funny
1:50 - Chapter 1 - A true tank of a car
2:40 - Chapter 2 - Beastial history
7:15 - Mid roll ads
8:55 - Chapter 3 - The end of the top down
10:05 - Chapter 4 - Into the modern era
11:50 - Chapter 5 - The latest beast
13:40 - Chapter 6 - Fortress on wheels
Building of the Circuit Of The Americas (COTA) F1 racetrack in Austin, Texas would be great for Mega Projects.
Or even the nürnburgring.....
@@Pilsnor I would definitely be interested in learning more about that!
Hey I built retaining walls at that track
I like that idea
+1
When I went to Washington D.C. for a field trip a number of years ago, I seen these “Beasts” in a motorcade. We were told it was the vice president’s motorcade bc it didn’t have an ambulance. Pretty cool to see, you’ll get maybe 5-10 seconds to see the motorcade bc it goes so fast but pretty cool to see.
Megaprojects: the internet
I just made the same suggestion. This has to be a regular suggestion, surely.
Not that mega. A former VP invented it in his garage 😎
I would personally send Simon my copy of "Where Wizards Stay Up Late
Not a project. Evolved piecemeal over several decades, and still is.
The Internet: from DARPA to Tim Bernes-Lee should be the full title.
'The beast comes equipped with smoke screens and oil slicks as defensive measures'
Well, I guess he's safe from any cartoon characters that may want to attack
You a spy hunter car?
@13:31 & tear GRASS grenade launchers 😂🙉
@@ratagris21 Great game, I couldn't think of the name of it but yeah... Spy Hunter
And that music
@@evanosburn718 the theme is Peter Gun.
We are safe from the cartoon character who rides in the back.
hmm, how about the one mega project we all use everyday: The Internet.
good idea and EXPLAIN y we need a ISP to use it.
I would be down for that.
I dunno how the internet was made or works and I'm too lazy to read... Could be interesting.
the internet is a hoax stupid! I can't believe there are people who still believe in it.
@@nebyeelda5862 The thing(internet) you just used to replay is a hoax ....got it.🤦♂️
@@dclark7703 if I may, I think the ISP thing is because they host the giant servers that you connect to, so technically, if you had what they had, you wouldnt need one..it would just be pointless cuz of the money needed
Excellent overview of all the vehicles...thanks!
As for an idea on a megaproject, how about the San Fransisco cable car system? I had the chance to check this out a few years back and the entire cable system is extraordinary...even the way the cars use the cable and their brakes for the insane hills.
Keep us posted!
13:30 "Tear grass grenade launchers"
Only effective against people with severe pollen allergies.
I think he meant tear gas.
A Megaprojects suggestion:
The _McDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagle,_ having first flown 48 years ago, it is still in service to this day. Outliving many other military aircraft along the way and still very highly effective. I feel it may prove of great interest, and the American part of your audience will love it.
and the sheer fact that it can fly with one of its wings fully missing
The B52 is also a timeless aircraft and still on the top ten list of the world's most dangerous aircraft. As a young man in the late '50s and early '60s, my father would take us out near the airbase close to the runways' end to watch the B52's take off on SAC patrols. Each was armed with nuclear weapons. The A10 Wart Hog is going to be another one that will persist; it already has. I have a cousin, retired now that flew the A10's and of course, he loves them. My father, while in the "Army Air Corps," flew P51's as fighter support for the B17's bombing Germany during WWII. He also flew the P47 on missions to destroy supply trains. Of the two planes, he favored the Mustangs but liked the P47 calling it a killing machine with the 8 50s in the wings and how easy it was to drop bombs on target with the power of the P&W 2800 double Wasp to climb out of harm's way quickly.
@@CajunWolffe Simon already covered the B52 in this video here > ruclips.net/video/OyTon_Dr0jA/видео.html
Enjoy
Simon: I have a channel called business blaze, it's rarely about business though. It's fine. No need for a second channel for non-business blazes
Also Simon: This project might not be mega enough. I need a second channel for it **makes Sideprojects**
Also Also Simon: "Welcome to a Megaprojects that might not be a megaproject" - still puts it on megaprojects and not sideprojects
You ok over there Simon?
Give this comment a medal !
It is almost as if he had been better off with one mega RUclips channel with separate subject playlists. LOL! His next channel will be Knitting Projects, wherein he will never, ever finish a knitting project, but go on and on about new patterns.
The blaze shuns the rules cause it just does
I think he's running low on that good old Columbian pure. He's probably rationing it so he only has so much organizational work he can do in one day.
Allegedly...
This comment is gold 😂🙌🏾
"The beast" is the same thing I named my HHR with an exhaust leak that tries to kill you every time you drive it.
😂😂😂
🤣
Switched from GM to Cadillac? Cadillac is a division of General Motors (GM.) Good video as always though.
hes euro....
@rwsthedemonking you're certainly not alone . Who knew that Hitler's own manufacturer would conquer Europe after all ?
You know this is gonna be gnawing at Simon's fact checking ocd.
There were a few instances bouncing between Cadillac and Lincoln where it wasn't quite right. I'll give it a pass because the videos are always great, and mistakes will happen.
@@NobletheSavage godwin's law
I find it entertaining that they've got all this high tech stuff, and then just a pump action shotgun.
It kind of sounds funny but assuming it's in the hands of a trained user, a pump action shotgun is usually more reliable than a semi-auto shotgun.
I’d bet they are not typical shotgun shells in those shotguns. They probably also have a high capacity magazine.
They have a lot more at their disposal. Like air support for example.
What is tear grass.
They also have a van full of dudes with M4 carbines, and other dudes with MP5 or MP7 submachine guns, among other things.
The Canadian Avro Arrow would make a great video topic!!!
oh yeah, the super sonic plane that shattered all records but who's dabue was ruined because of sputnik launching the same day
Oh yess! Please?!
@Whats my name Yeah that would be great too.
And focus part of the video on the whole conspiracy part. Like the Americans wanted it's Titanium for the Lockheed A-12, and in fact ended up with Lockheed.🤔
Or it's modern, civilian equivalent, the Bombardier C-series...
That's one of the cool things about living near Washington DC. I have seen several motorcades with various Presidents going by all over this area. I also worked downtown and was walking to work and passed within 2 blocks of where Reagan was shot - AS HE WAS BEING SHOT. I had no idea what was going on as all the action happened after I walked by (there was so much noise bouncing off the buildings I never heard anything unusual). It was interesting to see the changes around the area when I walked back to the Metro after work.
This was my suggestion! 😱
Looks like they were desperate for ideas
@@Masiba7517 boom roasted
I loved learning about the beast, it's the most modified car in the world
@@7756matty I am wondering just how much of the original donor car exists within the Beast.
Good suggestion Angie! It is one of the most unusual vehicles running around the world these days.
I have so many suggestions for a Megaprojects video, I have a passion for History in general, and Historical Buildings and Bridges, I love watching the American Experience series, I would like to suggest 1) The Rise and Fall of Pennsylvania Railroad Station in New York the most, or 2) Grand Central Station or the 3) Brooklyn Bridge, or lastly for now..lol, the 4) World Trade Centre Twin Towers, which ever you believe would be most popular for your viewers.
"16.8 to 36 miles per liter"
What is this? I only use kilometers per gallon.
Living in DC I see the beast quite a bit, when I worked in Dupont I would see Chaney every day in it flying up Conn. Ave to his home. It's a pain living here sometimes, in other cities you don't have the "I'm late because of a motorcade" problem.
You should do a video on The Beast (Roller Coaster) at Kings Island. It is the world’s longest wooden roller coaster coaster and has been for over 40 years. It’s a very large and interesting wooden structure.
3:30 Teddy was also the first to ride in an airplane. Yet another reason why Teddy was awesome, as though he needed more reasons
When it came to ireland it got stuck on a speed bump. So....
Nice
Lol it needs 4x4 like my truck. I left a comment about it having Diesel engines.
Simon I love your videos, i listen to business blaze on my way to work and watch your other channels on my off time! keep it up
"Armored" and "convertible" are not compatible with each other.
I was thinking that as well
When I turned 16, I went to DMV in Florida to take the test and get my drivers license. When I was paying for it, the girl at the counter explain to me that they had just started with separate motorcycle driver licenses and as there was no test as yet, I could have one for $4 more. Which I did. Moving to four other states and now another country, each DMV passed on my motorcycle licenses as I already had one. So now owning and driving motorcycles for over 45 years without knowing how to parallel park them. ;-).
thanks
I keep watching different videos and seeing your comments pop up, neat to know we have similar interests. Thanks for your videos mate.
Wait what?? Mike is truly everywhere and sees all
definitely a Megaproject for the amount of work that that's gone into the evolution and design over the years.
topic suggestion for a Megaproject? nanotech.
no pun intended actually. the advances and work that's gone into nanotech over the last few decades in unreal. molecular sized machines manipulating individual atoms? bloody amazing.
You need to see the clip of Obama's beast getting stuck in Dublin whilst emerging from the US Embassy compound. Quite funny.
That was a 2006 edition from the Bush era. The 2009 version vehicle would not have got stuck. They switched and started commercial medium duty class 6 truck chassis. The protection demands became so high that they had to stop using heavy duty consumer pick up truck platforms and switch to commercial medium duty platforms. You’re looking at a vehicle that is a bit more than twice the weight of Bill Clintons 1993 Cadillac Fleetwood.
That was not a POTUS Beast. It was an armored vehicle but not a Presidential mover.
Aww I was hoping that would be in here somewhere
@@andrewday3206 it was actually , they brought it over specifically for the visit and we had to listen to them going on and on about how great all the American security and equipment was, thats why it was so hysterically funny !
The whole country was STUCK with obama. Glad he's long gone........
The Quabbin Reservoir may not be the biggest, but when it was conceived & built in the early 20th century it definitely had an impact. Insuring a stable water supply for greater Boston meant clearing 4 small towns out of the way, right down to the cemeteries. You should consider doing this as a video soon.
It was not a switch back to General Motors from Cadillac! Cadillac is owned by General Motors so saying that it switced back to GM from Cadillac doesn't make sense. The Chassis of the Beast is actually a GMC Top Kick/ Chevy Kodiak truck.
That's the old one... The new one is based on a 3500 with 1st gen CT6 and 3rd gen Escalade ques
General motors owned Cadillac, but it's its own company. It's ran separately.
@@lordgarion514 That doesn't really matter. The cars that GM provided for the president have been Cadillacs. So the statement that it "switched back to GM from Cadillac" still doesn't make sense.
@@Rascofresco11 A 3500 general motors Silverado chassis could not handle the armor requirement and the weight. Think Silverado 6500 medium duty commercial truck. Similar to the Topkick GMC 5500s. Just more GVWR rating and suspension enhancements such as airbags for ride quality.
I love the way you say “military grade’ as a positive. I can tell you military grade means cheap, not actually going to save someone’s life because all governments take military contracts to the lowest bidder. Rockhound from Armageddon has a great quote.
Yeahh, anyone who knows what military grade means knows that you can get better than military grade at most private businesses LOL
An often misunderstood concept. There's no such thing as "military grade." There's military spec, which just means the military lists a requirement and the item either meets it or it doesn't.
As for the "made by the lowest bidder" BS, yes, the military will buy the least expensive thing that does what it needs to do. You don't drive a Veyron, do you? I mean, it's a great car, but it it worth it to own one if you never need to drive faster than 90mph? That doesn't mean that less expensive cars aren't good. In most cases they're better. Better for hauling the kids around, picking up groceries, etc. You know, the things you actually need a car for.
Yes, the military could bankrupt the country by building just one incredible fighter, that they'd then never be able to use for risk of losing it, and it wouldn't be able to do as much as ten less expensive jets. But it makes more sense to look at the task at hand, decide which tool you need to accomplish that task, then buy the required number for as little as possible. Because the tasks the military has are usually far more difficult than the average organization would ever have to deal with, the specs the military has for those tools are usually quite stringent. So yes, "military grade" usually means "The least expensive version of this really good thing."
While automatic transmissions may be a marvel of engineering, I'll stick with my "choose your own adventure" stick shift. :P
Been driving sticks since 2008 and no, I do not miss automatics. It does have an advantage: if your wheels keep spinning on snow or gravel, you can just use second gear to get the car moving even if you don't have traction control.
@@largol33t1, they do have a few advantages like that, but I think the real reason I'm so fond of them is because they make any vehicle more fun to drive, more engaging, more interesting. My Mazda3 is no sports car, but I have a blast behind the wheel of it. Downshifting in preparation for overtaking a slow driver, confusing the person behind you at a stop light when you take your foot off the brake but don't start moving, and hitting that perfect rev-matched downshift with the heel-toe action on an off-ramp corner help to prevent the 10 hours a week I spend in commute (before covid anyway) from giving me the urge to suck-start a 12ga.
I'm a trucker and run my own truck now. One of the main criteria of mine for finding a truck was it must be manual. So mine is. It's a 13 speed. I love it being manual.
@@RedbikemasterI had to look that up. I was confused that the number of gears was both odd and Prime. At first glance there has to be a better way to designate the gears, rather than High Range/Low Range with each gear in the High Range having it's own High and Low. (Assuming 13 Speed Eaton transmission.) I bet once I got used to it, I'd probably have a lot of fun with it though.
@@chaseweeks2708 it makes sense with the way they're built. You start with a 4 speed with Lo. Then you split that, it's a 9 speed (you don't use Lo with the splitter set to high). Then, you split the high side. Now you're at 13. If you split both low and high sides, you get an 18 speed.
It's a bit of a learning curve but it's satisfying to operate once you're used to it.
It being prime is just coincidence lol
I’ve always had a sneaky admiration for the massive soviet-era square-cut ZIL limos, which appeared to be based on 1970s Detroit land yachts. Moscow even had dedicated ‘ZIL lanes’ so the party leaders didn’t have to share the roads with the hoi-polloi.
can you do a video on the waterlinie, a defensive structure in the netherlands that will flood large parts of the country to fight off invaders.
ruclips.net/video/I79CQUTO5II/видео.html
Two Megaprojects Suggestions: 1. The BLM Helium Reserve. The US Government operated a massive helium reserve in Texas due to their strategic interest in Helium as a resource (critical for Cryogenics including MRIs, Research, Magnets, Fiber Optic Manufacturing, Welding, Scuba diving and Leak Detection). 2. Formula 1 Cars. No, they're not as durable as the Beast, but it takes several billion dollar companies with hundreds of employees each to build 2-4 cars per year, and the crash structures designed to protect a driver from a 200+MPH collision and survive are very much what I would consider a "Megaproject."
You're the man Simon, coupé.
Hey Simon! As a car enthusiast and someone who has enjoyed your videos on military projects, I really enjoyed this. Have you considered covering other cars? I think the McLaren F1 would make a great subject. A British company that never produced a road car creating the world’s fastest car seems like a megaproject to me!
Please mate! I wanna learn about the electrical grid!
Nice try ISIS
Idea for a ‚Megaprojekt‘ video: the World Scout Jamboree - An international scout camp happen every 4 years in a different country, where more than 40‘000 kids from all over the world meet... the planning and organizing of this event are largely done by volunteers over multiple years. I think that’s quite an interesting mega project!
presidents in USA: feel protected inside a heavly modified car
Car in Russia: feels safe because its carrying a KGB agent as president
Virgin US president's overkill vehicle 'The Beast'
Vs
Chad Dutch prime-minister's bike
Are we ever gonna get: The Internet
Kinda a Mega Project.
I was active duty USAF military officer detailed to support President Reagan’s team when he was at Ranchi Del Cielo. It was because of the decision to fly and not drive him for “local” visits. The decisions to fly came from one of his early trips via motorcade from his mountain top ranch. The ranch, Rancho Del Cielo, is high up in the mountains north of Santa Barbara, Ca. The road to and from the ranch is a typical mountain roadway, a twisting, winding two lane narrow road. After a trip down from the ranch, the motorcade vehicles had used up most of their breaks, largely because the vehicles were just so damned heavy. So they decided to fly the President, via helicopter rather than using ground transport. This may give you an idea as to just how heavily armored and equipped the Presidential vehicles are. Thank you for this video.
God bless you and the US Air Force. SAC will be back!
02:58 haha, I live there, never though I'd see Saint-Petersburg in a video about the US president's cars.
Ha ha, I've been there years ago. First thought: I know that, why did they choose that place for traffic. But it makes sense somehow. :-)
It's a really beautiful city you are living in!
Bravo Simon! Great storyline! Thank you.
We should've counted the elector college votes inside the Beast. It's safe than Capitol.
@5:02 When Simon Whistler turns in to Quentin Wilson for just a few seconds. Smoothly done Simon 😎
aka a wheeled tank. Absolutely astonishing vehicle.
aka APC.
@@alexander1485 pretty much
That smug coupe joke got my funny bone. So fancy and refined Simon. 😂❤️
''military grade vehicle'' *cries in humvee*
*Honks in milverado*
'humvee' otherwise known as HMMWV or Highly Mobile, Multi-purpose Wheeled Vehicle.
As a side note, another documentary detailed the 24 hours after the Pearl Harbor attack. One item discussed was that the secret service used Al Capone's car (impounded earlier) to deliver FDR to the capitol building to deliver his "Infamy" speech.
Al Capone is both not impressed AND ENTIRELY posthumously annoyed.
The background in this video is absolutely beautiful!!!!! ❤️
The one car where you wouldn't mind too much saying, "I live in my car."
The car Kennedy was in is at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan (just outside of Detroit, Michigan) along with four other presidential cars and the chair Lincoln was sitting in at Ford Theater. If you are ever in the Detroit area I highly recommend the Ford Museum.
Hi Simon, please make a video on the VLA (Very Large Array) If that's not a Megaproject, I don't know that is.
The reason why there are many presidential cars and why they take them to state visits in foreign countries is that the President and his staffers need a secure place to discuss the issues without any fear they will be bugged. These vehicles are guarded so that no unauthorized person can get anywhere near them. Many times the cars just sit inside the cargo aircraft waiting for use, they don't even take the cargo straps off them. Keeping them inside the plane also isolates the car from laser listening devices. Another interesting item of note is that the President has a pusher diesel RV fully equipped to Secret Service specs.
YES, I’ve been waiting for a mega project about a car.
Suggestion, you could do a lot of mega projects about famous race cars or super cars. For example looking into the engineering of the Bugatti Veyron or something similar to that.
Racing cars might be better suited to sideprojects, but I definitely think we should see a video on the Veyron. That thing is a marvel of engineering.
Idk, veyron is boring and doesn't really have any unique engineering.
A video on the koenigsegg regera would be interesting though.
Citroen DS would be a cool one
I’d like to see one on the Veyron. Maybe he could do a Side Projects episode with a bunch of cars.
@@--enyo-- production car speed records
Veyron, Koenigsegg Agera RS & SSC Tuatara
Really enjoyed this, love the bit about the deposit on the cars, really made me laugh out loud! Being a car nut, really appealed
Now that we're on to cars, can we have the Bugatti Veyron in the near future? Pretty sure it's a megaproject of its own, as it's basically Volkswagen AG's peak tech demo
That ad transition was...
brilliant.
My car is better, I have running bodyguards
Indeed
Iter. Do it. Yes it's not anywhere close to finishing just yet but damn, a yearly video on it or something? That's one helluva project!
Everybody gangsta til the car turns kids into trees
Its funny, when I was a child, President Esinhowerr and his wife Mamie use to visit close family friends in our town in the Summer. Their trip would only be known to the town AFTER he left, they came and went in a four-door plain chevy with just two Secret Service agents. He flew quietly in and out of Hanscom field in Bedford Massachusetts, for the 45 minute drive to the North Shore town of Marblehead. .
Suggestion: Bugatti Veyron
Yes!!!
ah yes Bugatti Veyron, the only car with better armor than "The Beast"
@@Zwidawurzn armor? Well I guess you can consider speed armor...
theres a billion videos on the Veyron
Simon, thanks for presenting that MEGA, doesn't mean just big, but also complex or ultra important. BTW, according to recent studies (and behavior) there is no current armor thick enough to match the thickness of our sitting president.
That type of cars we need in South Africa..
South Africans will understand 😂
SA is a mess. Sad it had to change for the worst
@@sc1338 no one can fix it anymore.. country out of control
Isn't it that white people live in constant fear in South Africa right now?
True, but our potholes will destroy that thing.
@@DefinitelyNotEmma Everybody lives in fear here.
That ending bit was very poetic :-) cheers Oli!
My grandfather work on one of the presidents car. David drury
My uncle Charles F Bersch also worked on one of the presidents limo’s. After Kennedy was shot he was part of a project that developed, to my understanding, the first bullet proof glass. This was right around the time I was born and didn’t even hear of this until I was an adult. I’d love to share more but I don’t know the facts well enough.
@@frankvadnais3536 think my grandfather worked in carters, I have a model at my house but I'm not there right now. Ill try and find it when i get home. Think it had the presidents name
Do the US electrical grid, specifically the rural electrification project! By some measures, it's the largest machine on earth. Imagine a new technology today that would require modifying every single house in the US. Definitely a megaproject
Next video topic: Paper weight
As far as mega projects go, I would like to see episodes on The Great Pyramids of Giza, The Great Wall of China, and the US Interstate Highway System.
Damn, I was hoping to see the clip of Obamas car bottoming out comming out of the American embassy in Dublin.
and that awesome "clank" sound it made. That was hilarious.
@@VaporheadATC the gards 'nothing to do with me' look 😁😁
Was that where they came up a ramp and got stuck getting out onto the road?
I really was expecting a mention of that incident. All that 'protection' and the thing is defeated by a simple speed hump!
@@markfryer9880 yes. Lol
This is a mega project sir. I love this
The Secret Service was to have used Al Capones armored Cadillac that was confiscated from him to repay his back taxes.
I wondered about that, so I paused and Googled it. Type "fdr and al capone's Cadillac; truth or myth" into your search window and find the story was complete fiction; Capone's car was a 1928 Caddy, FDR's was probably a 1940 Cadillac. Besides, Capone's car was in the UK from 1933 until 1958. I was hoping the story was true; how about you? It would certainly be a nice turnaround! Stay safe.
I remember reading somewhere that one of the cars that follows "The Beast" has a popup gatling gun that can be deployed in seconds.
The Rideau canal/river! Vote Canada !
😄 so glad you did this review. Awesome
"As it only got 16.8 - 36 miles per litre, 3.8 - 7 miles per US gallon" Sure you didn't switch up the units there, bud?
I think he got it wrong
Yeah, 36 miles per liter would be more than twice as efficient as the best current ICE cars.
I'd be amazed if it got even the 16.8 miles per gallon.
I don't think the base car got that before it was modified.
I want a car with 36 miles per litre
how many deciliters per furlong is that?
Giving away the details of this car and showing all of its hidden features in my opinion is cool information for U.S citizens but also helpful information for terrorist or any enemy.
just lease it to the next rich guy as "president safe" and charge them more
I worked at a GM dealership outside of DC for a while. Never worked on the beast but I did work on several armored Cadillacs and armored Suburbans for the Secret Service. Yes they are extremely heavy
Suggestion: The San Diego Zoo.
For years I thought all zoos were free to get into because the Zoo st Louis Missouri is free but its only like one of 2 ,whoever founded it set up massive trust to keep it free forever ,is san Diego the other one
Finally found you after Visual politiks. Subscribing to this channel.
"Evolution of the US President's *Bulletproof* Car" shows a shot of JFK
The irony
Love your videos. Thank you for getting "right to the subject" in each. Topic suggestion: The Trans-Alaska Pipeline.
The Beast: Keeping bullets out and infections in..
Are you referring to the presidents infection with covid?
@@davidfrench1325 yep
Ho ho, good one. 😂