"child safety"
7 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed border security concerns, illegal immigration, and the role of militia groups in monitoring the southern border. He addressed caller questions about undocumented immigrants crossing into Arizona, the government's apparent inaction on border enforcement, and the use of thermal imaging technology for border surveillance. The episode also included discussion of LDS Church protocols and child safety concerns, with callers challenging incomplete information presented on air. The show featured multiple sponsor advertisements and the recurring patriotic poem.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, government overreach, and cultural issues during this Friday morning broadcast. He covered weather patterns affecting the eastern United States, gardening and food self-sufficiency, the dangers of smartphone apps like Blue Whale that encourage child suicide, and critiques of child protective services and law enforcement. The show featured satirical music and discussion of historical resistance to tyranny, with a major segment devoted to organizing birthday card mailings to Stephanie Miner in North Dakota to circumvent a court order preventing her husband Bob Miner from contacting her.
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Mark Koernke and Joe McNeil discussed nanotechnology threats, communist symbolism in recent protests, and the suppression of discussion about child safety. They criticized media editing of protest imagery to hide communist symbols, addressed the normalization of pedophilia in institutional guidelines, and promoted airsoft training as a cost-effective preparedness tool for firearms muscle memory development.
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Mark Koernke discussed weather and municipal mismanagement in Lewiston, Idaho, which sold off snowplows based on global warming beliefs, leaving the city with inadequate snow removal capacity. He highlighted government waste and surplus military equipment available to communities. The show then shifted to a major topic: a Texas school principal threatening parents with arrest and fines for walking their children to school, which Koernke characterized as an unconstitutional power grab and communist indoctrination tactic. He criticized parents for petitioning rather than immediately removing their children and emphasized that this policy, if unchallenged, would spread nationwide. A caller from Massachusetts added that bullied children need parental protection during school transport. Koernke concluded by announcing schedule changes for the station's programming.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Don discussed constitutional rights, government overreach, and cultural degradation on March 25, 2014. The show featured criticism of a Rhode Island state senator's anti-Second Amendment stance, commentary on LGBTQ+ activism in schools and institutions, concerns about child safety and psychiatric associations' positions on pedophilia, and calls for listeners to support the Micro Effect through non-electronic donations. Koernke emphasized preparedness, night vision technology, and resistance to what he characterized as coordinated socialist and progressive agendas infiltrating American institutions.
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Mark Koernke opened the show with biblical references and announcements about Bible study sessions, then transitioned into a lengthy discussion of Sandy Hook Elementary School, claiming it was a covert research facility rather than a conventional school, and speculating about surveillance equipment and cover-up operations. He criticized the Obamacare website rollout as evidence of government incompetence and corruption, contrasted it with private sector success, and then delivered an extended critique of the University of Michigan's adoption of Soviet-style committee management systems in the 1990s, arguing that communist organizational models had infiltrated American institutions and destroyed operational efficiency.
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Mark Koernke discussed a case involving two foreign military personnel stationed at Fort Leonard Wood arrested for attempting to solicit a 12-year-old girl, expressing concerns about their country of origin being withheld and connecting the incident to broader security issues. The show featured extensive discussion of close-quarters combat tools including tomahawks, drywall hammers, machetes, and various knives (Bowie, kukri, cleaving blades), with callers sharing experiences and recommendations for weapons maintenance and selection. Koernke also reminisced about his father's musical career and family musical traditions, and promoted preparedness and survival equipment through various commercial segments.