"april 18 1775"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke opened the April 18, 2019 morning broadcast with extended historical commentary on the events of April 18-19, 1775, drawing parallels between colonial militia preparations and modern government overreach. He discussed Samuel Whittemore and militia mobilization, gun confiscation fears, and the mindset of tyranny. The second half shifted to practical survival topics including foraging (nettles, dandelions, cattails), food preservation, beekeeping challenges, and medical preparedness. A caller named Mike from Arizona contributed extensive discussion on the opioid crisis, Afghanistan opium production, and pharmaceutical supply chains, followed by detailed instruction on IV therapy, electrolyte replacement, and homemade rehydration formulas for heat illness.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, alternative media infrastructure, and patriotic activism on April 18, 2014, the anniversary of the Battles of Lexington and Concord. He emphasized the importance of building decentralized broadcasting networks, creating DIY shotgun microphones for audio surveillance and documentation, and producing patriotic parody music to inspire resistance. Koernke promoted multiple streaming platforms (Liberty Tree Radio, Indiana Freedom Talk Radio, the Micro Effect) as redundant systems against government censorship, explained technical workarounds for accessing broadcasts, and called for listeners to support independent media, create militia-themed video content, and prepare for conflict. He discussed space program history, criticized federal overreach, and praised truck drivers and patriots willing to take physical action.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, ammunition availability, and historical parallels to the American Revolution on April 18th. He covered spring planting conditions and exceptional fruit production prospects, promoted various ammunition suppliers including 30-06 tracer rounds and 8mm Mauser ammunition, and extensively discussed the significance of April 18th, 1775, comparing militia readiness then to current situations like the Bundy Ranch standoff. Koernke emphasized the importance of the poem 'Visitor from the Past' as a patriotic rallying tool, recommended patriotic music selections, and called for listeners to create and distribute media combining the poem with patriotic songs to inspire resistance against government overreach.