"bar association"
16 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness infrastructure including wireless technology, fiber optic systems, and CB radio frequencies for communication networks independent of government control. He promoted James Wesley Rawles' new novel 'Survivors: A Novel of the Coming Collapse' and encouraged patriot broadcasters to promote the book. The show featured extended caller segments addressing CPS (Child Protective Services) cases in Michigan, discussing government overreach in family matters, welfare dependency, and domestic violence situations. Koernke also covered the case of Randy Kelton, a pro se litigator in Texas imprisoned for practicing as a private investigator without a license, characterizing him as a political prisoner.
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Mark Koernke discussed recall efforts against U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu and other entrenched politicians, highlighting how 14 senators have already been removed through primaries. He covered constitutional issues including grand jury authority, warrant requirements, and judicial corruption, using a Michigan medical marijuana raid as an example of unconstitutional law enforcement. The show featured extensive discussion of hemp prohibition as a historical conspiracy by railroad and banking interests, and addressed the Bar Association's role in usurping sheriff authority and manipulating the court system. Callers from Michigan and Louisiana raised concerns about local government overreach and the need for grand jury reform.
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Mark Koernke discussed the constitutional role of militia as a check and balance against government tyranny, emphasizing that militia has historically taken many forms beyond state-sanctioned units, including the Rough Riders and Green Mountain Boys. He critiqued the Bar Association's role in perpetuating an unjust legal system and warned that the current government represents a globalist agenda. The show featured extensive discussion of quartermaster operations—the procurement, assessment, and fair compensation for supplies in military contexts—as essential to any organized resistance. Butterknife presented a detailed food storage program consisting of rice, beans, peanuts, and canned corned beef, designed to provide balanced nutrition at minimal cost, and demonstrated a procedure for home-canning butter as a shelf-stable fat source. Callers expressed concerns about election fraud, federal overreach, and preparation for potential civil conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed American history and sovereignty, focusing on British imperial influence over the United States from the Revolutionary War through the present day. He covered the Bar Association's contamination of the legal system, the implementation of surveillance infrastructure disguised as birdhouses, and the Global Synchronous Property Survey System designed to control land through satellite monitoring and purchasing caps on building supplies. Koernke fielded calls from listeners including Al from South Dakota on property rights and the Levelers, and George from Florida on military service and resistance to tyranny, emphasizing the need for Americans to actively defend constitutional freedoms rather than submit passively.
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Mark Koernke discussed government corruption, election integrity concerns, and economic manipulation on September 4, 2008. He analyzed the 2008 presidential election, criticizing both major candidates and questioning whether voting legitimizes a rigged system. Koernke covered the foreclosure crisis, British Crown commerce influence on American law, and the suppression of alternative energy technologies like fusion and electric vehicles. He emphasized preparedness, constitutional rights, and the need for citizens to recognize government overreach and resist dependency on state welfare systems.
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Mark Koernke discussed his recent travels across Texas, Iowa, Arkansas, and other states, describing observations of burned wreckage along roadways and upcoming patriot initiatives including a Patriots trivia game and militia organization manuals. He delivered an extensive historical lecture on American sovereignty, the Bar Association's British origins, the missing 13th Amendment banning titles of nobility, Andrew Jackson's resistance to bankers, the Civil War as a banker-orchestrated conflict, and FDR's 1933 gold confiscation executive order. Koernke emphasized the need for Americans to understand constitutional law and reclaim their nation from foreign banking interests.
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Mark Koernke discussed economic decline, property seizure, and government overreach on May 16, 2008. He analyzed severe weather patterns and criticized environmental alarmism, particularly regarding Al Gore and climate change narratives. The show featured extended caller discussions on child protective services corruption, asset forfeiture laws, and the role of county sheriffs in resisting federal authority. Technical discussions covered ammunition reloading, discarding sabot technology, and alternative firearm designs. Koernke emphasized themes of constitutional rights, local sovereignty, and preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed corporate infiltration of local government, the illegitimate nature of admiralty courts, and strategies for fighting back through constitutional law and jury nullification. He addressed callers about county charters being replaced by corporate bylaws, the gold-fringed flag as a symbol of maritime jurisdiction, and the need to establish common law courts. The show covered preparedness topics including gas masks and gardening for self-sufficiency, and promoted an upcoming April meetup in Oklahoma for training and community building.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and encouraged listeners to promote Paul's message to bikers and other groups, arguing that Paul's consistent constitutional message appeals across demographics. The show featured extended caller discussions on jural societies, the Bar Association as a tool of control, the Federal Reserve's illegal implementation, and vehicle shutdown technology allegedly installed in cars since the 1990s. A caller named Julie, a military specialist, described her ongoing CPS nightmare in California involving her children in foster care, detailing alleged corruption in family courts where judges, prosecutors, and attorneys profit from cases. Koernke explained how court systems operate under admiralty law and discussed the financial incentives driving child welfare agencies. The final segment addressed government surveillance, keyword flagging, and the importance of veterans speaking truth about military operations and government deception.
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Mark Koernke discussed Michigan's state budget crisis and tax increases, criticizing government mismanagement, excessive bureaucratic spending, and the exclusion of lawyers from new service taxes while targeting working people. He analyzed the proposed shutdown of state services including bridges and hunting areas, arguing that toll bridges generate profit and questioning why essential infrastructure would be threatened. Koernke also examined media manipulation of Ron Paul's debate performance, comparing it to his firsthand experience at Senate militia hearings where C-SPAN edited footage to misrepresent events. He addressed issues of police brutality, tasers, and the need for peace officers with communication skills rather than aggressive enforcement tactics.
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Mark Koernke discussed Michigan's socialist government and tax hikes amid economic decline, drew parallels between Tolkien's 'Lord of the Rings' and the need for citizens to 'scour the shire' of corrupt governance, criticized media propaganda and the engineering of consent through Hollywood, addressed false DUI charges and the Veterans Disarmament Bill as examples of guilty-until-proven-innocent systems, and promoted Ron Paul as a presidential candidate while emphasizing the importance of understanding constitutional government and jury nullification.
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Mark Koernke and guest Doug Hudson, author of 'How Governments Disarm Citizens,' discussed constitutional rights, the Bill of Rights, and how government has systematically undermined citizen liberties through administrative law and the commerce clause. They analyzed the Federalist and Anti-Federalist Papers, examined the original 13th Amendment banning titles of nobility, and explained how licensing agreements convert rights into privileges. The conversation covered the founding fathers' intent to limit government power, the importance of private property rights, and the need for citizens to understand and defend their constitutional protections.
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Mark Koernke discussed alternate transportation and self-sufficiency technologies, focusing on bicycles as practical tools for preparedness and how to construct cargo carts from salvaged materials. The show shifted to a detailed legal discussion with callers Andrew and Dave about the corporate structure of the U.S. government, the War Powers Act of 1933, and how federal agencies derive their authority from the United States Code. Koernke and Dave explained the distinction between the Statute at Large and the U.S. Code, the incorporation of the IRS and BATF as subsidiaries of the Federal Reserve Bank, and how to research unpublished sections of federal law to understand government authority. The episode concluded with a caller from Georgia discussing resistance and the importance of unity against what Koernke characterized as illegitimate federal power structures.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Fetcher discussed federal overreach in law enforcement, focusing on a no-knock raid in Georgia that resulted in the death of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston. They analyzed how commercial informants and federal programs incentivize illegal searches, comparing tactics to East German surveillance states. The hosts examined the erosion of jury trials in American courts, attributing the decline to financial incentives for judges and lawyers embedded in the legal system. They also covered a controversial incident in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where school staff staged a fake active shooter scenario that traumatized sixth-grade students, which Koernke characterized as psychological conditioning tied to anti-gun agendas. The episode promoted Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and encouraged grassroots activism.
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Mark Koernke discussed the historical parallels between the American Revolution and contemporary patriot concerns, focusing on property rights, eminent domain abuse, and the role of militia as a check against tyranny. He emphasized that the founding fathers at Lexington and Concord did not want conflict but understood their obligation to defend liberty, drawing comparisons to modern citizens' responsibilities. The show covered how eminent domain has been corrupted from its original purpose of public works into a tool for private profit, and explored the philosophical basis of property rights rooted in the concept of personal time and labor. Koernke and co-host Don discussed the importance of community organizing, jury nullification, and maintaining an armed citizenry as a deterrent to government overreach, while also promoting self-sufficiency and local mutual aid.
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Mark Koernke discussed the transfer of prisoners between states (Arizona to Indiana, California to Illinois) as part of an illegal and fraudulent system of penal bonds that monetize incarcerated individuals as collateral. He explained how states generate bonds against prisoner numbers and trade these instruments on global markets, creating fictional duplicate bonds when prisoners are transferred across state lines. Koernke argued this system represents modern slavery and indentured servitude, with connections to investment firms like Merrill Lynch, and warned that the expansion of the prison industry (from 1 million to 3 million prisoners in recent years) mirrors Soviet gulags. He urged listeners to investigate their investment portfolios for involvement in penal bonds and cautioned that border collapse under NAFTA could lead to prisoner trafficking to foreign countries.