"child protective services"
54 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke opened the October 7, 2011 morning broadcast with announcements about militia training camps, preparedness supplies, and fundraising efforts. He discussed CPS concerns during occult high holy days, promoted gas masks and ammunition stockpiling, and highlighted James Wesley Rawls' new novel 'Survivors.' The show featured extensive quartermaster recommendations including batteries, games, and survival supplies from various vendors, along with updates on camp closures and training schedules across Michigan militia facilities.
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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 opened the show with discussion of preparedness activities in southeastern Michigan, including solar panel maintenance and PVC pipe armoring techniques for protecting infrastructure. He described a recent militia training exercise involving portable micro-station radio deployment and emphasized the importance of alternative communication systems in potential conflict scenarios. The episode included extensive discussion of historical archives from 1993-1996 related to government activities, followed by commentary on local law enforcement and government corruption, including allegations of compromising photographs of judges, prosecutors, and state police. Koernke detailed a 1994 child exploitation case at an I-275 rest area involving teachers, school administrators, and child protective services staff, framing it as evidence of systemic corruption. The show featured multiple commercial segments for preparedness products and concluded with calls for donations to support the broadcast.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2010 midterm elections, government overreach, and the case of Sergeant Charles Allen Dyer, whose daughter was allegedly taken by Oklahoma child protective services. The show covered concerns about gun control legislation, propaganda tactics by mainstream media, and the need for citizen activism. Koernke emphasized the importance of contacting Oklahoma officials to pressure them regarding Dyer's case and called for prayers and financial support for the sergeant's legal defense.
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Mark Koernke discussed the case of Sergeant Charles Allen Dyer, whose seven-year-old daughter was taken by Child Protective Services in Oklahoma after being moved out of state from Tennessee. Koernke alleged government involvement in child molestation and called for listeners to contact state representatives and senators with contact information provided. The show also covered Quartermaster Friday topics including Alice pack recommendations from Maine Military, Swedish stove kits, gas masks, AR-15 magazines from AIM Surplus, and 50-caliber ammunition. Koernke encouraged listeners to support Dyer through calls, donations, and physical assistance, warning that the child was in danger during the October occult season.
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Nancy Cornke hosted Communications Tuesday on October 19, 2010, discussing emergency communication protocols, hand signals, and situational awareness. The episode focused heavily on a legal case involving Charles Dyer from Oklahoma, who faced child molestation charges and CPS involvement stemming from a custody dispute with his ex-wife. Nancy provided detailed legal advice regarding judge recusal, venue change, and resources like jailforjudges.com, while discussing broader concerns about judicial bias, double jeopardy in weapons charges, and alleged corruption involving courts and law enforcement in drug trafficking.
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Nancy Koernke and Don Butcher hosted the evening broadcast on October 15, 2010, celebrating Mark Koernke's three-and-a-half-year milestone of being out with all rights restored by Michigan. The primary focus was the Baby Cheyenne case in New Hampshire, where callers JJ and David provided updates on the Irish family's custody situation. Despite the parents being cleared of charges, the two older sons remained in foster care due to a state-wide gag order law in New Hampshire. The hosts provided contact information for New Hampshire officials and encouraged listeners to call and fax demands for the children's immediate return. The second half of the broadcast covered preparedness topics including winter food storage, rabbit raising for meat and fertilizer, water filtration systems, vitamin supplementation in municipal water supplies, and natural remedies for illness.
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Mark Koernke discussed a New Hampshire child protective services case involving two boys still in foster care after their sister was abused, despite both parents being cleared of wrongdoing. He provided contact information for state officials and judges to demand the children's return. The bulk of the episode focused on Quartermaster Friday preparedness topics, including home food production (canning, freezing, and drying berries and fruits), making fruit leathers, growing and storing root vegetables through winter, and making inexpensive soups from dried peas and potatoes. Callers and co-hosts discussed textile production skills including knitting, crocheting, spinning wool, and using vintage sewing machines for self-sufficiency. The conversation also covered CPS financial incentives for child removal, background check requirements for school employees, and the loss of American textile manufacturing.
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Mark Koernke discussed Detroit's controversial demolition plan to tear down one-third of residential neighborhoods and force residents to relocate, raising concerns about property rights and eminent domain abuse. The episode focused heavily on a critical child welfare case in New Hampshire involving an infant (Baby Cheyenne) allegedly removed from parents, placed in foster care, found with signs of sexual abuse, and returned to the same foster family—prompting urgent calls to action for listeners to contact state officials and judges. Koernke also covered personal preparedness activities, the Knob Creek gun shoot, and vehicle maintenance before winter.
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Nancy Cornke hosted the second hour of the Intelligence Report on October 14, 2010, focusing primarily on the case of Baby Cheyenne, a newborn allegedly removed from her parents by New Hampshire Child Protective Services and placed in foster care where she was reportedly sexually abused. Callers and hosts discussed evidence of abuse, questioned the decision to return the child to the same foster family, and provided contact information for officials including Judge Susan W. Ashley, Sheriff Scott Hilliard, and CPS workers. The episode included discussion of a militia training exercise scheduled for October 23rd near Cleveland, Texas, and broader concerns about government overreach and child protective services failures. By the end of the hour, callers reported that the child had been returned to her parents following public pressure from phone calls.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed a child custody case in New Hampshire where a baby was returned to parents after a coordinated public pressure campaign involving phone calls to Child Protective Services. The hosts covered multiple cases of alleged government overreach in child protective services, including those of Kristi Chivokowski, Amy Sharron, and Gayle Lynn LaMaster. They emphasized the importance of citizen activism, discussed militia training exercises scheduled for October 23rd near Cleveland, and reviewed night vision equipment specifications and pricing. The broadcast included calls from listeners sharing similar experiences with CPS and discussing preparedness and constitutional rights.
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Mark Koernke discussed federal overreach in education through Common Core Standards, which he characterized as a government takeover of public schools using stimulus money. The episode featured extended caller discussions about a controversial child custody case in New Hampshire involving alleged government overreach by child protective services, which callers and Koernke interpreted as coordinated federal action. Topics included constitutional rights to travel without licenses (Georgia HB 875), preparedness through food storage and gardening, and concerns about government dependency through welfare programs as a mechanism of state control.
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Mark Koernke and caller Joe discussed organizing grassroots activism through Joe's 'Strike Team,' an email and phone call campaign to pressure government officials on various issues including child protective services abuses. The hosts covered a controversial case involving CPS allegedly removing a child from parents, criticized corruption in the judicial system including judges selling children to private prisons, and called for organized citizen action including a planned protest in New Hampshire. The episode emphasized using technology and coordinated communication to hold government accountable and protect families.
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Mark Koernke discussed a deeply disturbing case involving a seven-day-old infant in New Hampshire who was taken into state custody and allegedly sexually abused while in the care of Child Protective Services and hospital staff. The parents had been separated from their newborn daughter 16 hours after birth, and during a supervised visitation, the mother discovered severe vaginal bleeding and signs of sexual assault on the child. Koernke characterized the incident as part of an organized occult conspiracy involving CPS, hospital personnel, and law enforcement, claiming it was a ritualistic sacrifice operation timed for October. He called for legal action, public exposure, hospital surveillance footage retrieval, and identification of all personnel involved, while expressing escalating rhetoric about confronting what he described as a network of child-abusing government operatives.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple topics including the Knob Creek shooting event, militia preparedness, and a controversial child custody case involving an Oath Keepers member in New Hampshire where CPS took an infant. He analyzed political dynamics around potential VP changes, criticized federal overreach and CPS practices, warned about infiltration within patriot organizations and secret societies, discussed CFR meetings on UN gun bans, and took a caller's complaint about repeated dog seizures by authorities.
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Mark Koernke discussed a Time magazine article by Barton Gelman attacking militia groups, criticizing its yellow journalism and false connections between constitutional patriots and extremists. He covered FBI and ATF misconduct, including cheating on ethics exams in the Detroit office and the agency's failure to win cases in three years. Callers reported on Child Protective Services seizing a newborn from an Oath Keeper in New Hampshire and discussed tactics for resisting unconstitutional government overreach, including refusing to cooperate with social workers without proper warrants and the importance of grand jury investigations into CPS abuses.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, alternative communications, and legal issues affecting citizens. The show covered heirloom seed storage and long-term food solutions, penny sheets and CD distribution as information dissemination methods, Y2K as a government test, old technology paired with modern microcircuitry for resilience, and foreclosure fraud involving improper banking instruments. Callers raised concerns about Florida's attorney general Bill McCollum, Child Protective Services immunity from prosecution, fraudulent CPS accusations, and alternative radio frequencies and microwave transmission techniques for independent communications networks.
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Mark Koernke discussed anti-gun legislation, military firearm registration at Fort Campbell, and alleged targeting of military families by Child Protective Services while servicemembers are deployed overseas. He warned soldiers to relocate families off military bases and detailed concerns about government disarmament plans. The show featured detailed information on SABO accelerators (sabot ammunition), first-generation night vision binoculars, and freeze-dried food storage for preparedness. A caller discussed historical parallels to the American Revolution and the timing of potential conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed successful militia training exercises conducted over the weekend across multiple states, including Arizona and Michigan, with particular praise for signal communications coordination and the Alfie Omega training crew. He covered preparedness topics including tactical vehicle camouflage techniques using affordable house paint, equipment maintenance protocols, and the importance of keeping gear organized. Koernke also addressed fuel price fluctuations, plant frost protection for Michigan residents, and took a caller (Josh) dealing with child protective services interference in custody matters, offering advice on confronting government overreach in family cases.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed post-WWII veteran resistance to government overreach, including historical incidents in Tennessee and Kentucky where combat veterans prevented election fraud and resisted ADL secret police activities. The show covered a 1940s political cartoon predicting future government control, the importance of preserving patriotic media on hard copy, and caller George from Texas who referenced a veteran shooting a judge involved in child protective services. The hosts analyzed U.S. military interventions in Grenada and Iraq, criticizing the lack of legitimate purpose and highlighting Chinese communist expansion in the Caribbean and Central America. They addressed drug trafficking in Mexico and the Baja region, missing women, and the Natalie Holloway case in Aruba. The episode concluded with warnings about pending anti-gun legislation including HR 2159 and a Senate assault weapons ban.
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Mark Koernke discussed European interference in U.S. presidential elections, media manipulation tactics, and the coordinated messaging across mainstream news networks. He analyzed the 700 Club's coverage of globalist agendas, warned about currency replacement (the Amero), and emphasized the need for militia organization and preparedness. Koernke promoted alternative broadcasting infrastructure through Liberty Tree Radio and micro-stations, addressed child protective services corruption in Michigan, and provided detailed medical support information including trauma dressing suppliers and gas mask procurement from MainMilitary.com.
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Mark Koernke hosted John Ridgway, a Michigan resident who recounted his arrest and legal persecution stemming from a handshake involving anointing oil after a court appearance. Ridgway described how authorities deployed SWAT teams, hazmat crews, and military personnel based on outdated militia-related profiles, despite medical tests finding no toxins. He discussed the subsequent loss of custody of his children due to alternative medicine use and the death of his daughter, which he partially attributes to being stripped of parental rights. Koernke and Ridgway discussed the broader context of government overreach, economic warfare through immigration policy, and the need for the patriot community to organize and support those facing legal persecution. Contact information was provided for potential legal assistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis using a Titanic metaphor, advising listeners holding stocks in failing banks to demand physical share certificates rather than selling at depressed prices, predicting a two-year recovery cycle for laundered money. He addressed the educational-industrial complex with caller Karen from Maryland, explaining how corporations like General Motors pressured the University of Michigan to prioritize foreign students over qualified American applicants, and discussed how higher education screens and channels student thought through institutional gatekeeping. Caller George from Florida reported a case of Child Protective Services entering a home without a warrant and seizing a baby, prompting discussion of government overreach and resources for legal defense. The show concluded with commentary on media bias in presidential election coverage and comparisons between Democratic and Republican approaches to governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed the oil industry's artificial price manipulation and storage crisis, arguing that major oil companies and financial institutions deliberately restricted supply to drive up prices during the 2008 energy crisis. He then shifted to militia recruitment and organization, emphasizing the need to train new members and channel frustrated young people into structured militia formations rather than reactive violence. The show featured extended technical discussion on 12-gauge flechette ammunition reloading, followed by caller Greg from Florida describing his battle with Florida's child protective services system, with Koernke connecting this to broader government overreach and calling for organized, intelligent resistance across multiple fronts.
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Mark Koernke discussed political candidates who abandon their principles after gaining office, using Ron Paul as an example of someone who should have stayed in the 2008 race to the end. He emphasized the importance of the militia movement and patriot efforts as a combined force. The show featured calls from listeners including Dr. Lee Rod Gillum from Texas, who discussed Child Protective Services abuses and family separation cases, and Greg from Florida, who connected callers working on constitutional issues. Koernke criticized the profit motive behind CPS actions, discussed infrastructure manipulation regarding fuel lines and power grids, and addressed hurricane preparedness and oil price manipulation in the context of Hurricane Ike.
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Mark Koernke and Darryl Sivak discussed ammunition reloading techniques and equipment on Weapons Wednesday, covering single-stage presses, dies, primers, powder, and brass sourcing from gun ranges. The show addressed the national ammunition shortage affecting law enforcement and civilians, with callers reporting police departments struggling to obtain factory ammunition. Koernke and callers discussed geopolitical concerns including Chinese economic acquisition of U.S. grain facilities and the Georgia-Russia conflict, foreign military presence on U.S. bases including German and Canadian troops, and the role of mercenaries and intelligence operatives in global conflicts. The hosts warned of potential domestic conflict over child protective services interventions and emphasized militia preparedness and alternative energy suppression.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia training materials, including newly completed rifle marksmanship and medical SOP manuals, and promoted an upcoming event at Washington on the Brazos in Texas. Caller George from Florida raised concerns about Department of Transportation regulations targeting truckers and asked about the writ of attainder, which Koernke explained as an unconstitutional legal tool used against families and individuals. The show covered admiralty law principles, corporate jurisdiction tactics, and child protective services as foreign entities. Mike presented information on the 2001 anthrax attacks and scientist Bruce Ivins, with Koernke arguing the attacks targeted war opponents rather than war promoters, suggesting government involvement. The episode concluded with discussion of honey trap operations, interrogation tactics, and recommendations for gas masks.
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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 delivered an extended Weapons Wednesday episode covering firearms training fundamentals, including rifle and pistol marksmanship techniques, trigger control, barrel dynamics, and ammunition management. He discussed recent militia training exercises in Michigan using progressive airsoft-to-live-fire instruction methods. The show addressed federal overreach through Real ID mandates and ATF harassment, featured caller accounts of home foreclosure abuses by Wells Fargo and the Texas FLDS raid involving child seizures, and concluded with NBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) defense preparation including gas mask use and fallout protection strategies.
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Mark Koernke and Mike Nasser discussed California's homeschooling court ruling and urged listeners to contact Governor Schwarzenegger demanding he fire state employees responsible for the lawsuit and rescind all court activity. They emphasized that 166,000 homeschooling families could organize to relocate and change community demographics. The show covered warnings about the dangers of Mojave rattlesnakes in Arizona, detailed first aid for dogs including treatment of various poisons (drugs, chemicals, lead, chlorine), and discussed unconventional treatments for venomous bites using ice packs, epinephrine, and DC electrical current. Callers contributed information about Ron Paul campaign signage and radio host censorship by the ADL.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Michael discussed John McCain's naval aviation incident aboard the USS Forrestal, Mexican military incursions across the U.S. border, and preparedness for potential domestic conflict. The show covered tactical militia organization, weapons selection (AK-47s vs. AR-15s, ammunition sourcing), and squad-level fire team structure. Callers contributed perspectives on border security, child protective services overreach, and ammunition availability. The hosts promoted their America in Peril video series and discussed Gulf War illness, military recruitment practices, and the Eliot Spitzer scandal as evidence of government corruption.
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Mark Koernke discussed legal strategy with a caller named Spike regarding a motorcycle titling case in Indiana, advising on motions to dismiss and evidence presentation. The show featured extensive tactical training content on magazine pouches and combat load configuration, including methods to modify pants pockets with elastic bands for magazine storage. Koernke promoted an upcoming April training meeting covering medical, firearms, and preparedness instruction, and took calls about child protective services cases, grand jury procedures, women's firearms training, and suicide weapon analysis related to recent events.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional governance, socialist infiltration of institutions, and preparedness during this Thursday episode. Callers raised concerns about family destruction by state agencies, Bilderberg influence on the 2008 presidential election, and weapons specifications for AR-platform rifles. Mike Nester provided medical guidance on winter survival preparedness, baby wipe selection for field use, and emergency treatment of sucking chest wounds. The show promoted Ron Paul's presidential campaign and featured updates on grassroots support efforts including the Ron Paul Limo project.
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Mark Koernke's show (hosted by Nancy and Donald in Mark's absence) covered federal firearms regulations and their impact on FFL dealers and gunsmiths, discussing how paperwork violations and regulatory harassment drove many out of business. Callers discussed health insurance mandates, debt elimination, and preparedness. The show featured extensive discussion of Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, CIA involvement in drug trafficking, alleged Clinton administration deaths, and concerns about government overreach. A significant portion addressed Child Protective Services abuses, family rights violations, and a candidate running for county sheriff to reform the system. Topics included homeschooling versus public education, constitutional law in courtrooms, and the need for infrastructure to support grassroots political movements.
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Mark Koernke discussed recent mass shooting incidents and media coverage patterns, arguing that shootings are engineered events designed to advance gun control agendas. He analyzed how media misidentifies weapons to condition the public and noted that most mass shooters have been on psychiatric medications like Prozac. Koernke criticized NRA leadership for allegedly being compromised and called for members to vote them out. He promoted Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign with a fundraising push for December 15th, discussed preparedness and militia infrastructure, addressed concerns about foreign troops being positioned to occupy America, and took calls from listeners about child protective services abuses, the Oklahoma City bombing, and the need for armed resistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed shotgun selection and maintenance for preparedness, covering various gauges and action types, then shifted to child protective services corruption and profiteering mechanisms. He addressed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, emphasizing the critical December 16-17 fundraising window and the need for grassroots support through small donations. Koernke warned of threats to Ron Paul's safety, drawing parallels to JFK's assassination, and discussed the importance of vice-presidential selection. Callers raised concerns about CPS child removal practices and the need for documentary evidence, while another caller expressed that Ron Paul's election or failure would determine whether supporters resort to armed conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed the legal mechanisms by which the U.S. government claims ownership of citizens through birth certificates registered with the Department of Commerce, framing this as a debt-collateral scheme tied to the Commerce Clause. He and caller Mike Nester explored how child protective services operates as a money racket targeting families, and critiqued the legal system as a police state where ignorance of law is weaponized against citizens. The show promoted Ron Paul's presidential campaign as a solution to government overreach, advertised upcoming Ron Paul rallies in Philadelphia (November 10) and Florida (November 17), and featured extended discussion with callers George and Mike on military preparedness, survival gear, and field maintenance—particularly the importance of extra socks, foot powder, and proper clothing layering in cold and wet conditions.
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Mark Koernke discussed emergency preparedness in response to storm damage in Michigan, including low-cost methods for securing windows and doors using chipboard and hinges. He promoted the November 5th Ron Paul fundraising campaign using V for Vendetta costumes, providing budget costume-building tips. The show featured extended caller discussions about identifying government agents involved in operations like Waco, the spiritual and moral corruption of federal agencies, the importance of staying to fight rather than fleeing, and concerns about Child Protective Services. Topics included helmet improvements, training sponsorships, vaccine awareness materials, and firearms availability.
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Mark Koernke discussed firearms maintenance and modifications on Weapons Wednesday, covering SKS and AK rifle configurations, magazine options, and parts sourcing. The episode shifted to a serious discussion about Child Protective Services abusing military families, with caller Conchita, a 25-year military veteran, describing how CPS fabricated charges to remove her honor-roll children in New York under the Giuliani administration. Koernke connected this to broader corruption involving judges, prosecutors, and federal officials from the Southern District of New York, naming figures like Michael Mukasey and Michael Chertoff. Callers and the host discussed the systemic exploitation of military families while service members are deployed overseas, the role of gatekeeping in perpetuating corruption, and warnings about potential violent responses from returning veterans whose families have been destroyed by the system.
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Mark Koernke discussed the upcoming Knob Creek Gun Show (October 12-14) featuring machine gun shoots, military weapons demonstrations, and a speaking engagement at a Shoney's restaurant in Shepherdsville, Kentucky. He covered historical military topics including Gatling guns, Russian aircraft in Korea, and Soviet pilots flying MiG fighters during the Korean War. Koernke highlighted a Ron Paul rally at the University of Michigan that drew 2,000-2,500 attendees and discussed tribal sovereignty issues related to child protective services in Oklahoma. He addressed concerns about UN treaties affecting national parks and Indian lands, criticized NRA leadership for UN involvement, and commented on a school shooting incident in Cleveland, Ohio.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed economic devaluation of the American dollar, currency preparedness strategies, and the importance of holding euros and precious metals as insurance against currency collapse. They promoted Ron Paul's campaign rally scheduled for that evening in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and criticized mainstream media's suppression of Ron Paul coverage. The hosts addressed the Patriot movement's decentralized nature, explained how defectors and undercover operatives function in resistance efforts, and took a caller (George) reporting on Child Protective Services conducting strip searches of schoolchildren without warrants, urging aggressive legal action against government overreach.
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Mark Koernke discussed federal corruption, child protective services abuses, and historical revisionism regarding the American Civil War. He detailed a case of a federal prosecutor arrested for attempting to solicit a child, connecting it to broader patterns of government perversion and socialist infiltration of social services. Koernke then examined Civil War history, arguing it was driven by economics and foreign manipulation rather than slavery, and highlighted the Russian Tsar's role in preventing European intervention. He discussed militia organization in Michigan, media propaganda tactics used against militia members, and his unpublished Dagger Wars book series written for militia training purposes.
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Mark Koernke and Nancy Cornke discussed military families facing Child Protective Services intervention due to financial hardship while serving overseas, contrasting low military pay with private contractor salaries. The show featured a live caller reporting from Mackinac Island on Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, with approximately 150 supporters and 45,000 volunteers nationwide. Callers debated the North American Union, foreign policy in the Middle East and Palestine, the Federal Reserve's control of currency, and the importance of local activism to resist government overreach in schools and municipal planning.
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Mark Koernke and co-hosts Don and Nancy discussed Great Lakes water theft, water purification technologies, and the treatment of military families and veterans. The show covered concerns about water being extracted from the Great Lakes without compensation to Michigan residents, ancient plant-based water purification methods used in desert regions, and the struggles of military families dealing with child protective services and inadequate veteran benefits. Callers raised issues about CPS targeting deployed soldiers' families, federal race classification changes affecting Native American definitions, immigration policy, and religious persecution patterns globally, with extended discussion of occult influences in government and the need for Christian vigilance.
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Mark Koernke discussed military families facing Child Protective Services intervention due to financial hardship while serving overseas, contrasting low military pay with high private contractor compensation. The show featured a live report from Mackinac Island about Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, with approximately 150 supporters attending his appearance at the Republican Leadership Conference. Koernke criticized U.S. foreign policy, the North American Union, and currency manipulation tied to oil pricing, arguing that the government no longer represents the people. Callers discussed local activism as a means to resist federal overreach, with examples of successful community opposition to school policies and development plans.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple topics including the promotion of his book 'Battle for the Republic: Book 2, The Winter War,' updates on detained militia members including Danny Riley's hunger strike and legal proceedings, and extensive commentary on government overreach targeting families through child protective services, particularly affecting military families and the Amish community. He criticized the education system as a profit-driven racket, attacked the Clinton administration's role in Waco, warned of Hillary Clinton's potential return to power, and emphasized jury nullification as a tool against government abuse. The show featured caller discussions on voting rights, welfare policy, and military family destruction by social services.
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Mark Koernke discussed the monetization of government debt through penal bonds, traffic tickets, and incarceration, explaining how states trade prisoner bonds into financial markets. He promoted Finnish M9 gas masks from Centerfire Systems as affordable preparedness against NBC threats, detailed the straw man legal fiction used to enslave Americans through mandatory healthcare and other contracts, and advocated strongly for Ron Paul's presidential candidacy as the only solution to federal overreach. Callers discussed police abuse, Social Security fraud, and child protective services violations, with Koernke providing contact information for legal assistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed a video from Montebello, Quebec showing undercover police provocateurs attempting to incite violence at a peaceful protest against global governance. The episode featured detailed analysis of the video evidence, including identification of the undercover officers by their identical riot boots, and criticism of YouTube for removing the video under false claims of violent content. Callers discussed child protective services overreach, county resolutions for freedom, and preparedness strategies. The show emphasized the importance of documenting government provocateur operations and maintaining peaceful resistance to tyranny.
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Mark Koernke discussed border deployment logistics, militia mobilization efforts, and preparedness operations. The show covered Jack Otto's funeral and an upcoming Grassroots organization event in Livonia, Michigan on August 16th. Koernke addressed supply chain coordination for border operations, the importance of quartermaster and support roles, and warned about government personnel shifts as potential indicators of coming crises. The episode included discussion of illegal immigration policy, family separation issues through child protective services in Florida, and criticism of government overreach. A caller named Greg described his family's experience with Florida's Department of Children and Family Services taking his children.
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Mark Koernke discussed child protective services abuses and government corruption with caller Greg from Florida, who detailed how his children were taken by the state without evidence and placed in harmful conditions. Koernke outlined strategies for filing federal complaints against judges and caseworkers involved in what he characterized as a criminal protection racket motivated by federal grant money and judicial profit-sharing schemes. The show also covered militia organizing efforts, specifically the 162nd militia-only gun show in Ohio, and criticized the NRA for allegedly collaborating with anti-gun legislation while Gun Owners of America maintained principled opposition to gun control.
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Mark Koernke discussed the degradation of higher education, describing how universities prioritize political correctness and foreign students over qualified American applicants, using federal grants to fund ideological agendas rather than genuine education. He criticized the education system's focus on indoctrination rather than skill development, advised listeners to complete degrees quickly to avoid inflated costs, and highlighted how institutions exploit students financially. The show featured callers discussing similar experiences with predatory educational institutions like ITT Technical Institute, government surveillance programs, and the destruction of families through child protective services in Florida. Koernke warned of an impending political shift and emphasized the need for Americans to resist what he characterized as demonic forces within government.
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Mark Koernke discussed the infiltration of American institutions by socialist and communist operatives, focusing on child protective services, education, and law enforcement. He covered the recruitment of ideologically aligned personnel in colleges, the Ritalin drugging of children in schools, child trafficking and kidnapping rings (including the CIA's Finders project), and the systematic destruction of families through state intervention. Callers George from Florida and Mike contributed examples of CPS abuses, false documentation by workers, and the need for local law enforcement independence from federal programs. Koernke emphasized that these problems require consistent justice and that half-measures will not solve systemic corruption.
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Mark Koernke discussed the degradation of higher education, criticizing universities for prioritizing political correctness and foreign students over qualified American applicants, particularly at the University of Michigan. He explained how universities manipulate degree timelines and costs to extract more grant money from students. Callers shared experiences with student loan predation, government overreach in child custody cases, and surveillance state expansion. Koernke warned of accelerating national debt, the destruction of the family unit as a deliberate strategy, and the need for spiritual revival to counter socialist infiltration of American institutions.
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Mark Koernke discussed satellite broadcasting infrastructure, federal funding mechanisms for child protective services, and Ron Paul's 2007 presidential campaign. Caller George from Florida raised questions about executive orders and child welfare agencies; the discussion covered how federal funding creates leverage over state programs. Caller Dave from New York provided updates on a defeated immigration bill (crediting Hal Turner's publication of senators' contact information), a college student's acquittal on firearms charges, and Bloomberg's proposed camera ban in New York City. The show emphasized contract law, constitutional rights, and grassroots activism including stamping Ron Paul messages on currency.