December 2018
69 episodes
Monday, December 3
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The episode featured recurring advertisements and promotional content for Liberty Tree Radio, including solicitations for year-end donations and commercials for firearms retailers and military surplus suppliers. The bulk of the transcript consisted of the patriotic poem 'Visitor From the Past' recited twice, with fragmented discussion segments interspersed that touched on counterfeit coins, ammunition availability, red flag gun laws being passed in various states, and general firearms and preparedness topics. The actual substantive content was minimal and heavily interrupted by commercial breaks and repeated promotional material.
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This episode featured promotional content for Liberty Tree Radio and affiliated sponsors including Guns and Ammunition (Ohio-based firearms retailer), Liberties Guardian (online gun and ammunition sales), and Main Military (military surplus and preparedness equipment). The broadcast included the recurring patriotic poem addressing government overreach, loss of freedoms, and constitutional rights. The episode concluded with fragmented discussion that appears to address military movements and tactical preparedness, though the transcript becomes garbled toward the end.
Tuesday, December 4
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Mark Koernke hosted Weapons Wednesday, discussing preparedness, alternative power generation systems, and political commentary on federal cases involving the Bundy family and Hammond ranchers. The show featured extensive caller discussion on charging batteries using hand-crank generators, stationary bicycles with alternators, wood gas systems, and hydropower alternatives. Mark emphasized the importance of building tactical reserves and called for presidential pardons for the Hammonds, while criticizing federal prosecution of ranchers and expressing concerns about the Bundy case being held in C-TAC rather than Nevada.
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Mark discussed geopolitical tensions, banking instability, and domestic legal cases. He analyzed Trump's foreign policy moves, including military provocations in Ukraine and Syria, while questioning whether Trump was genuinely fighting corruption or pursuing globalist agendas. He devoted significant time to the case of Bob Miles, a 23-year-old held on a $30,000 bond facing charges related to CPS involvement and child custody, which Mark characterized as a conspiracy and violation of constitutional rights. Mark urged listeners to prepare for potential civil unrest, maintain communication networks, and support legal efforts on behalf of Miles.
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Mark Koernke's show on December 4, 2018 was disrupted by a cyberattack that knocked down the website themicroeffect.com and disabled one of two audio streams. The host and his technical team (Joe and Edward) spent much of the broadcast troubleshooting the outage, discovering that listeners could still access the show through alternative platforms including TuneIn.com, RadioLine (a Google app), and Android apps. Koernke discussed the attack as evidence of government suppression, drew parallels to previous protest movements (Black Lives Matter, Antifa, statue-burning), commented on the Yellow Vest protests in France, and urged listeners to prepare with fuel and supplies while alternative broadcast infrastructure was being established. The show emphasized the need for donations and alternative communication methods should further attacks occur.
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Mark Koernke discussed the importance of having backup copies of encoders and media sources in case of service disruptions, emphasizing preparedness and self-reliance during a technical issue affecting the broadcast.
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Mark Koernke discussed corruption involving a property transaction where judges and attorneys purchased an undervalued house, paying approximately fifty thousand dollars in taxes on a property valued at seven point six million dollars. He commented on systemic corruption and referenced President Trump's response to such matters.
Wednesday, December 5
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Mark Koernke hosted Weapons Wednesday, discussing firearms, ammunition types, and weapon selection including AR-15s, shotguns, and pistols. The episode featured extensive discussion of rifle calibers, ammunition ballistics, and reloading techniques. A second segment introduced Craig discussing radiation detection equipment and nuclear safety issues, with a historical reference to a banned 1986 Weird Al Yankovic Christmas song featuring Ronald Reagan.
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Mark Koernke discussed his personal real estate situation, offering a world-famous house at half price as part of a private contract arrangement due to financial difficulties. The episode featured extensive political commentary criticizing President Trump as part of the deep state, comparing his actions to those of previous administrations on issues including Syria, border security, and globalist policies. Koernke also discussed Jeffrey Epstein's connections to Israel and alleged blackmail operations, and explored the Mandela Effect phenomenon through the lens of quantum entanglement and digital simulation theory, citing YouTuber Dale Du Fay's explanations. Callers contributed commentary on police state conditions, weapons rights, and various conspiracy theories.
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Mark Koernke and Joe McNeil discussed the failure of U.S. government agencies to protect American citizens, arguing that federal institutions have never meaningfully defended the country and instead extract wealth and control from the population. They examined the 9/11 air traffic control narrative, government corruption including congressional insider trading, the border crisis, and the dependency created by welfare and banking systems. The hosts emphasized the need for organized resistance, proper military planning with entrance and exit strategies, and financial independence from government control, while also addressing alleged cyberattacks on their broadcast infrastructure traced to Israeli Mossad operations.
Thursday, December 6
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Mark Koernke discussed gun registration resistance in Colorado, referenced Solzhenitsyn's writings on communist oppression, analyzed the Bundy Ranch case as an example of decentralized militia mobilization, and provided detailed tactical instruction on defensive armed response to law enforcement incursions, including squad-level tactics, fire team coordination, and rules of engagement for neighborhood defense scenarios. He announced schedule changes for upcoming broadcasts and discussed military unit organization and small-unit tactics.
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This episode of Weapons Wednesday featured Mark and Don discussing firearms and self-defense tools, including AR-15s, shotguns, pistols, and concealed carry options. The show included a lengthy patriotic poem about government overreach and loss of freedoms, followed by fragmented discussion touching on flag laws, gun confiscation concerns, federal enforcement actions, and perceived threats to constitutional rights. The episode was interspersed with advertisements for Liberty's Guardian Guns, Liberty Tree Radio fundraising, and mainmilitary.com survival and military surplus supplies.
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Mark Koernke discussed border security failures, gun control legislation in Colorado, pedophilia in government, the need for armed resistance, and historical parallels to the American Revolution. He criticized Republican spinelessness, warned against compromise with tyranny, addressed Poland's rising power in Europe, and covered topics including the USS Liberty attack, World War II history, and the necessity of civil war to revalidate American independence. The show included extensive discussion of preparedness, militia organization, and rejection of overseas military interventions.
Friday, December 7
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This episode consisted primarily of repeated advertising segments and the patriotic poem 'Visitor From the Past,' with fragmented discussion interspersed that touched on World War II history, Pearl Harbor, military preparedness, and weapons. The coherent content was minimal; most of the broadcast featured looping advertisements for Weapons Wednesday, Liberty Tree Radio fundraising, and military surplus retailers, along with multiple recitations of the show's opening patriotic poem.
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Mark discussed the butter-nice food storage spreadsheet, a free open-source tool built in OpenOffice that helps users inventory and analyze their emergency food supplies by calculating nutritional content, converting units of measure, and projecting storage duration in man-days, man-months, and man-years. He emphasized the importance of printing physical copies as backup and not relying solely on electronic records. Mark also covered cryptocurrency market manipulation, recommending Bitcoin and Litecoin as long-term investments for those with expendable funds, noting current low prices present buying opportunities despite recent market crashes. He briefly discussed silver as an investment, criticizing EU regulations mandating lead-free solder that waste silver in consumer electronics, and touched on the superiority of cryptocurrencies over traditional banking systems due to their ability to cross borders without government interference.
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Mark Koernke discussed a cyberattack on his microeffect.com website, attributing it to Israeli operatives and describing it as part of an ongoing "dagger war" between competing power factions. He analyzed the Republican train incident, organized crime history, and the ideological divide between Republicans and Democrats, arguing that Republicans lack the willingness to fight while Democrats employ violence. Koernke addressed Antifa activity, communist infiltration in universities, and the importance of maintaining armed preparedness as a check on government power. A caller named Rick discussed anti-Christian sentiment in communist movements and shared anecdotes about police corruption and institutional failure in education and medicine.
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Mark Koernke discussed job security and employment vulnerability in the context of specialized versus unspecialized positions. He explored how businesses can easily replace workers who do not conform to organizational expectations or 'toe the party line,' and how this affects individual economic security and independence.
Monday, December 10
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Mark Koernke hosted a show featuring repeated segments on weapons education (Weapons Wednesday), emergency preparedness, and survival supplies. The episode included extensive discussion of a California wildfire disaster with graphic eyewitness accounts of burned vehicles and fatalities, followed by detailed caller discussion about emergency food rations, freeze-dried meals, and the composition of survival food products like Wise brand six-packs. The show emphasized self-sufficiency, preparedness, and constitutional rights throughout.
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The episode opened with promotional content for Weapons Wednesday, featuring discussions of firearms and self-defense tools, followed by fundraising appeals for Liberty Tree Radio and advertisements for MaineMilitary.com survival and weapons supplies. The bulk of the transcript consists of a lengthy patriotic poem about governmental overreach and loss of freedoms, followed by severely corrupted audio content that becomes increasingly garbled and unintelligible, ending with what appears to be distressed audio describing a fire incident with multiple fatalities.
Tuesday, December 11
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This episode of Weapons Wednesday featured Mark and Don discussing firearms, self-defense, and preparedness. The show included extensive advertising for firearms retailers and military surplus suppliers, along with repeated recitations of a patriotic poem about American freedoms and government overreach. Discussion touched on militia preparedness, weapons selection, and constitutional rights, though much of the latter portion of the transcript appears corrupted or garbled.
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Mark Koernke discussed geoengineering and chemtrail spraying in Indiana, connecting it to UN 2030 rewilding programs and California wildfires. He extensively criticized Trump's foreign policy, arguing Trump continues arming ISIS, antagonizing Russia and China, and supporting Israel despite alleged Israeli involvement in 9/11. Koernke addressed alleged Mandela Effects including the disappearance of Elvis Presley's "Jingle Bell Rock" and discussed quantum entanglement theories. He condemned what he characterized as Zionist influence in immigration policy, court appointments, and global conflicts, criticized various world leaders including Netanyahu and Theresa May, and expressed frustration that Trump has not delivered on campaign promises regarding border security, wars, or prosecuting political opponents.
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Mark Koernke discussed California wildfires as a deliberate weapon of war, analyzing a survivor's account from the Camp Fire and explaining how smart meters, forestry mismanagement, and power company coordination enabled mass destruction. He covered the invasion of western states by California progressives, real estate speculation, and McMansion construction defects. Koernke also detailed GPS targeting technology used on his Michigan property, including tornado strikes that aligned with GPS markers, and described smart meter incidents that destroyed appliances in nearby homes, attributing these to coordinated electrical attacks rather than space-based weapons.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple interconnected topics including smart meter surveillance and energy pricing manipulation, forest fire mismanagement under Clinton-era policies, Agenda 21 and land seizure by foreign interests (particularly Chinese), and alleged federal infiltration tactics. He analyzed a Ukrainian military briefing about planned Christmas offensive operations, warned of potential false flag attacks to provoke war, and criticized Israeli and globalist influence over U.S. foreign policy in Ukraine and Syria. A caller from Las Vegas shared experiences with federal agents using deceptive tactics and multiple false credentials.
Wednesday, December 12
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Mark discussed Weapons Wednesday content focused on affordable firearm options and DIY rifle building. He provided specific product recommendations and pricing for 80% lower receivers, upper receivers, and AR-15 components from vendors like Ghost Rifles, Moriarty Armaments, and Gun Deals, emphasizing how to build multiple rifles affordably for family members and militia preparedness. The episode included appeals for donations to Liberty Tree Radio and advertisements for preparedness suppliers.
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Mark Koernke discussed border security and wall construction funding, questioning contractor involvement and money flow to foreign entities. He covered international military exercises on U.S. soil involving 14-23 countries practicing house-to-house searches and gun confiscation, which he claimed to have warned about for decades. Koernke analyzed European protests and yellow-vest movements as organized resistance to globalist agendas, comparing them to potential American militia mobilization. He played an extended audio piece critiquing gun control advocates' hypocrisy regarding parenting, mental health, education policy, and drone strikes. The show concluded with discussion of historical European civilian gun ownership before EU restrictions and Muslim immigration policies.
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Mark Koernke discussed the availability and quality of knives and precision tools in Europe, contrasting past accessibility of well-made blades and machinery with current restrictions and regulations that have made such items harder to obtain openly.
Thursday, December 13
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Mark Koernke discussed border security and immigration policy, featuring extended audio of a White House meeting between President Trump, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and Senate leadership debating funding for a border wall. The show covered disagreements over wall construction effectiveness, with fact-checking about actual miles built versus requested funding. Koernke and guests analyzed militia-based border monitoring alternatives, including thermal imaging and minimal-cost surveillance strategies, arguing that private citizen efforts could be more effective than government solutions. The episode also featured discussion of the Self-Reliance Initiative and job training programs.
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Mark Koernke hosted a Weapons Wednesday episode featuring discussions on firearms, constitutional rights, and militia preparedness. The show included caller commentary on Second Amendment rights, gun regulations, and historical references to Waco and the militia movement. Topics covered preparedness, ammunition, and the philosophical nature of freedom, with callers debating government overreach and the role of armed resistance in defending constitutional liberties.
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Mark Koernke and Joe McNeil discussed government spending inefficiency, border wall construction concerns, and vaccine safety on December 13, 2018. Koernke criticized the proposed border wall as likely to be a financial scam involving foreign contractors, citing past examples of failed infrastructure projects in Michigan and elsewhere. The hosts also addressed healthcare issues, including concerns about flu vaccines for elderly populations and referenced Eustace Mullins' book 'Murder by Injection.' The episode covered government program waste, multiple layers of taxation (particularly road taxes and proposed toll roads), and the privatization of American infrastructure.
Friday, December 14
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Spike Timmons hosted a Friday episode of "Hammering the New World Order" on December 12, 2014, featuring discussion of a legal case involving the Miner family and alleged government overreach by North Dakota authorities, including claims of ex parte court proceedings, failure to notify defense counsel, and comparisons to Ruby Ridge and Waco. The show included extensive commentary on rule of law breakdown, constitutional violations, and calls for resistance to government tyranny, interspersed with personal anecdotes from the host about his birthday and various patriotic messaging.
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Mark Koernke discussed economic collapse, government overreach, and preparedness on the evening of December 14, 2018. Topics included New York police revenue decline due to reduced ticketing, Ukraine conflict and gold reserves, gun control laws in Connecticut, New York, and Washington State, and the role of Valerie Jarrett in the Obama administration. The show featured practical advice on cold-weather radio operations, battery management, and food production planning for 2015, along with announcements about militia activities including the Victor 3 APC demonstration and weapons training at Camp Emmerich.
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Mark Koernke discussed border security and immigration enforcement, criticizing the processing of migrants at the southern border and government spending priorities. He analyzed the Bush family funeral envelope incident, dismissing it as media distraction. Koernke examined George W. Bush's military service as a pilot, explaining the fly-by-wire technology of Delta Dart and Delta Dagger interceptors. He drew parallels between Kennedy and Bush family political dynasties, discussing how both families were marketed for political power. Koernke criticized the two-party system as controlled by behind-the-scenes interests, using Ron Paul's treatment at Republican conventions as an example of party gatekeeping. The show included caller John from Maine discussing how party platforms control candidates regardless of party affiliation.
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The episode contained fragmented discussion touching on occult-related topics and references to harm, though the transcript appears severely corrupted or incomplete, making coherent analysis of the show's main content impossible.
Monday, December 17
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This episode consisted primarily of promotional advertisements and recurring show segments for Liberty Tree Radio programming, including Weapons Wednesday, Communications Tuesday, and Quartermaster Friday. The transcript contained multiple airings of the patriotic poem "Visitor From the Past" and extensive commercial content for firearms retailers, military surplus suppliers, and preparedness vendors. Fragmented audio segments discussed militia activities, gun shows, and constitutional rights themes, though the actual show content was heavily obscured by repetitive promotional material and apparent audio quality issues.
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The episode featured promotional segments for firearms retailers and military surplus suppliers, followed by a lengthy recitation of a patriotic poem about American freedoms and government overreach. The latter portion of the transcript became increasingly garbled and incoherent, with fragmented discussions touching on cold weather gear, gas masks, chemical protective equipment, MREs, and health-related topics including cholesterol and dietary concerns, though the exact context and coherence of these segments is severely compromised by transcription errors.
Tuesday, December 18
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Mark Koernke discussed a police shooting case involving a man named Jones who was shot 23 times by officers who attempted to plant knives on his body and tamper with dash cam evidence. He drew parallels to his own experience with police misconduct and criticized the legal system's failure to hold officers accountable, arguing that appeals and legal processes are ineffective. The episode included extensive discussion of firearms, ammunition, calibers (5.7, .22 mag, .45-70), body armor penetration, weapon modifications, and preparedness, with callers asking technical questions about rifles, scopes, and ammunition availability. Koernke emphasized the importance of critical thinking over mindless obedience and referenced historical examples like the Praetorian Guard to warn against unchecked government power.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness for potential economic collapse and government overreach, warning listeners about deep state plans to shut down communications and seize firearms. He addressed Trump's policies as continuation of establishment agendas, criticized mainstream media censorship, and emphasized the importance of stockpiling supplies including food, water, batteries, flashlights, and ammunition in preparation for possible EMP attacks or grid failures. The show covered Faraday cage construction for protecting electronics, the declining value of the US dollar as foreign nations dump it, and the need for community organization to resist gun confiscation efforts.
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Mark Koernke opened the December 18, 2018 morning broadcast with commentary on political expectations (Hillary Clinton arrests, Trump impeachment) that he characterized as dead horses being beaten. The main topic was a federal court ruling striking down New York's nunchuck ban as unconstitutional under the Second Amendment, with Koernke discussing the case history, the absurdity of laws that criminalize even disposal of the weapons, and Bruce Lee's martial arts mastery. The second half addressed recent cyberattacks on the Micro Effect website that occurred on Friday and the previous week, resulting in destroyed archives and requiring significant financial and technical resources to rebuild. Koernke announced the archive system had been reconstructed with new security features and requested listener support via subscriptions.
Wednesday, December 19
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The episode consisted primarily of repeated advertisements and promotional content for firearms retailers, military surplus suppliers, and Liberty Tree Radio's fundraising appeal, interspersed with the recurring patriotic poem 'Visitor From the Past.' Mark discussed weapons, ammunition sourcing, and preparedness topics in fragmented segments, including references to rifle kits, ammunition calibers, and military surplus items. The show featured promotional spots for Weapons Wednesday programming and emphasized self-sufficiency and preparedness themes.
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Mark Koernke discussed firearms, ammunition availability, and weapons preparation on this episode. The show featured extensive advertising for firearms retailers and military surplus suppliers, along with discussion of various weapon platforms including AR-15s, .50 caliber rifles, 8mm Mauser, and pistols. Topics included ammunition scarcity, firearm customization, and the challenges of sourcing hard-to-find ammunition in the current market.
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Mark Koernke and Joe McNeil discussed child protective services as an instrument of state control, using a case of an incarcerated mother losing custody of her children to illustrate systemic abuse. They examined the Bob Miner case, criticizing CPS for removing healthy children from a well-stocked home and condemning the government's monetization of family separation. The hosts then shifted to Second Amendment rights, warning that gun confiscation efforts would escalate through legislation and red flag laws, and criticized the younger generation's anti-gun activism. They concluded with commentary on Christmas celebrations being suppressed by political correctness, urging listeners to call 701-251-2365 to leave messages for imprisoned Bob Miner and to support the Micro Effect network.
Thursday, December 20
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Mark Koernke discussed personal property maintenance projects including installing a fence for his dog's backyard, neighbor relations and safety concerns, and briefly addressed border wall policy and government overreach. The episode featured repeated advertisements for Liberty's Guardian firearms, MaineMilitary.com survival gear, and Liberty Tree Radio fundraising, interspersed with the patriotic poem 'Visitor From the Past' and fragmented discussion segments that appear corrupted or poorly transcribed.
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The episode featured Mark Koernke discussing constitutional law, Supreme Court cases, and legal strategies related to government overreach. The show included discussion of Leo Wanta and Reagan-era intelligence operations, along with references to legal precedents and court filings. The broadcast was interspersed with advertisements for firearms retailers and preparedness suppliers, and promotional content for Liberty Tree Radio and Weapons Wednesday programming.
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Mark Koernke discussed economic collapse scenarios, preparedness strategies, and government failures. The episode featured an extended fictional narrative depicting a family's descent into poverty during hyperinflation and societal breakdown, followed by commentary on education system corruption, border security, financial instruments of national power, and the importance of self-reliance over government dependence. Callers contributed perspectives on Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370, school system failures, and preparedness through reading materials.
Friday, December 21
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The episode featured repeated promotional segments for Liberty Tree Radio's end-of-year fundraising campaign, advertisements for military surplus and firearms retailers (mainmilitary.com and Liberties Guardian), and promotion of Weapons Wednesday programming. The bulk of the transcript consists of the recurring patriotic poem 'Visitor From the Past' recited multiple times, interspersed with fragmented audio segments discussing preparedness, firearms, and equipment maintenance that appear corrupted or heavily transcribed with errors.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness products and vendors, then covered two major regulatory topics: the FAA's incoming restrictions on drones and remote-controlled aircraft, which he characterized as a corporate sellout to Amazon and other commercial interests using terrorism as justification, and the broader pattern of immediate-effect regulations that restrict civilian freedoms. He also addressed FAR 103 ultralight aircraft regulations as one of the last remaining areas of aviation freedom, and fielded caller questions about Discord communication channels for Liberty Tree Radio listeners.
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Mark Koernke discussed economic collapse concerns, the Clinton family's alleged criminal history, and geopolitical strategy involving Ukraine, Israel, and India. He analyzed Masonic symbolism in public figures, warned about supply chain disruption and the need for preparedness (citing Twinkies as long-shelf-life survival food), and explored historical parallels with Prohibition-era hideouts and waterway escape routes. The show included caller commentary on psychological operations and detailed discussion of India's role in global power dynamics and Western civilization undermining.
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Mark Koernke discussed infrastructure and access issues, specifically addressing bridge blockages and restrictions on movement across certain spaces. The episode touched on historical patterns of transportation access and control of public spaces.
Monday, December 24
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This episode consisted primarily of Christmas music and holiday songs interspersed with religious content about biblical prophecy, specifically focusing on the Tribulation, the Antichrist, the False Prophet, and related end-times theology. The show included extended segments of Christmas carols and holiday music, followed by detailed scriptural analysis of the Antichrist's character, titles, and role in Christian eschatology, drawing from passages in 1 John and 2 Thessalonians.
Tuesday, December 25
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Mark Koernke opened the show with a lengthy recitation of a teacher's interpretation of the Pledge of Allegiance, emphasizing the meaning of each word and the principles of individual liberty, representative government, and national unity. The episode included musical interludes and reflective commentary on patriotic values, constitutional principles, and the importance of understanding the foundational meanings behind American civic traditions.
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On Christmas morning 2018, Mark Koernke discussed alleged government efforts to arrest and prosecute treasonous officials, including speculation about 45,000 to 65,000 sealed indictments, military tribunals, and potential arrests beginning January 3rd. He emphasized the need for Americans to actively support such actions through public expression on social media and other platforms, rather than passively waiting. The show featured extended discussion about moral decay in America, the commercialization of holidays, the importance of individual responsibility and freedom, and historical parallels to Martin Luther's reformation and the printing press as tools for spreading information. Callers contributed perspectives on government accountability, the need for citizens to demand results from elected officials, and the importance of standing up for constitutional principles.
Wednesday, December 26
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Mark Koernke discussed the concept of Reconstruction as an ongoing federal strategy to consolidate control, citing Al Benson's analysis of how the public school system was used as a propaganda tool following the Civil War and how a second phase of Reconstruction began in the 1950s through civil rights and desegregation initiatives. He explored utilitarian philosophy and its role in restricting individual liberty through mechanisms like property taxation, mandatory education, fiat currency, and IRS enforcement. The episode included extended discussion of firearms preparedness, including rifle and ammunition selection for self-defense and survival scenarios.
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Mark Koernke hosted Weapons Wednesday, discussing various firearms including AR-15s, shotguns, pistols, and specialized weapons. Callers shared experiences with gun ownership in restrictive states like New Jersey, discussed relocating firearms to less restrictive jurisdictions like West Virginia, and exchanged anecdotes about ammunition purchases, international shipping complications, and homemade weapons designs. The episode featured advertisements for preparedness suppliers and gun retailers.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple interconnected topics on December 26, 2018, including troop withdrawals from Syria and Afghanistan, alleged opium trafficking operations, the bump stock ban as a precursor to gun confiscation, FEMA prison barges and detention systems, and the role of private military contractors like Blackwater. He emphasized concerns about martial law preparation, multi-jurisdictional task forces for gun confiscation in northeastern states, and the use of technology to track government operations. The show featured caller Joe McNeil and included discussion of historical parallels to communist confiscation tactics.
Thursday, December 27
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Mark Koernke discussed escalating federal and state government threats to gun owners, focusing on New Jersey as a potential flashpoint for armed conflict. He detailed scenarios of coordinated gun confiscation operations involving Homeland Security, state police, and federal agencies, drawing parallels to historical sieges at Waco and Ruby Ridge. Koernke warned listeners in New Jersey, Connecticut, New York, Virginia, Massachusetts, and Maryland to prepare for potential armed confrontations, emphasizing the need for coordinated resistance and information dissemination to counter government narratives.
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Mark Koernke discussed natural disasters including volcanic activity at Krakatoa and radiation hazards from foundries and volcanoes, drawing parallels to Mount St. Helens. He extensively criticized gun buyback programs in Baltimore and New Jersey, detailing how activists could exploit low buyback prices by submitting damaged magazines and non-functional parts. He also addressed Trump's Syria withdrawal and troop deployment to the southern border, questioning the lack of media coverage and calling for war crimes trials against ISIS members.
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Mark Koernke discussed military personnel stationed at the southern border during the Christmas period, touching on furlough policies and the deployment of troops. The episode appears to focus on border security issues and military service matters related to the Trump administration's border policies.
Friday, December 28
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Mark Koernke discussed weapons, preparedness, and vehicle modification for tactical purposes, including AR-15 and AK-47 recommendations, armored vehicle construction techniques, and engine conversion methods. He then shifted to historical analysis of 1994-1995 federal operations, the Oklahoma City bombing, and current threats from federal agencies including the ATF and Homeland Security. Koernke warned listeners about anticipated gun confiscation efforts, bump stock regulations, and red flag laws, urging armed resistance and militia organization. He concluded with calls for donations to Liberty Tree Radio and emphasized the need for preparedness and community defense.
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Mark Koernke discussed border security funding and criticized government inefficiency, arguing that private citizens could build border barriers more effectively than the federal government with the same resources. He recounted historical examples of Americans taking direct action against crime (Purple Gang in Detroit) and contrasted government waste with what patriot groups could accomplish with $16-20 million in border funding. The show included calls from listeners supporting local security initiatives and self-reliance over federal intervention.
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Mark Koernke discussed border security and immigration issues, focusing on deaths of migrant children and alleged criminal activity by undocumented immigrants. He criticized Beto O'Rourke's border activism and called for legal action against George Soros for allegedly funding migrant caravans. The show covered proposed gun control measures in New Jersey, multi-jurisdictional task force operations, and urged the Patriot Movement to unite against federal overreach. Callers contributed perspectives on litigation strategies against Soros and concerns about military intelligence units being deployed to the East Coast.
Monday, December 31
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Mark Koernke opened the show with two extended recitations: first, a maritime folk song about Davy Jones and sailors at sea, and second, a nostalgic personal anecdote about a teacher named Mr. Laswell who explained the meaning of the Pledge of Allegiance word-by-word to his seventh-grade class, emphasizing individual responsibility, unity, and constitutional principles. The episode concluded with reflection on the addition of 'under God' to the Pledge and concerns about its potential removal from schools.
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This episode consisted primarily of promotional content and a patriotic poem about American freedoms and government overreach. The show featured advertisements for Liberty Tree Radio, The Liberty's Guardian gun shop in Ohio, and mainmilitary.com (a military surplus and ammunition retailer). A lengthy poem was recited addressing themes of lost liberties, government control, taxation, permit requirements, and the erosion of constitutional rights.