"china trade"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed food supply vulnerabilities and trade imbalances with China, criticizing the export of American pork and oil while importing lower-quality products. He covered nuclear preparedness and fallout shelter planning, emphasizing water storage, waste management, and psychological considerations for extended shelter stays. He promoted Bear Creek Arsenal's AR-10 and AR-15 upper receivers at competitive prices. The episode featured a caller discussing the April 19th Patriots Day significance (the 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord) and promoting the Apple Seed rifle marksmanship program in Kerrville, Texas, which teaches shooting fundamentals to civilians of all ages.
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Mark Koernke discussed government food destruction during the COVID-19 crisis, arguing it was intentional rather than incompetent. He analyzed Michigan emergency power legislation (Public Acts 302 and 390) through a caller's presentation of Senator Tom Barrett's speech opposing gubernatorial overreach. Koernke connected this to historical patterns of government control, including the 1943 Detroit riots and post-WWII militia arrests. He warned that food is being weaponized, with American agricultural production being diverted to China while domestic supply chains collapse, comparing the situation to the Ukrainian famine. Callers discussed National Guard presence at supermarkets, police security at stores, and Chinese acquisition of U.S. corn production.
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Mark Koernke discussed government corruption and theft, particularly in Quartzsite, Arizona, where local officials allegedly embezzled funds. He explained how removal of federal accountability systems enabled widespread looting by government employees at all levels. Koernke criticized the proposed "Super Congress" (Supreme Soviet Committee) as unconstitutional centralization of power, comparing it to communist structures. He also covered the TerraFugia flying car receiving FAA clearance and a $600 million Defense Department contract for a flying Humvee. The second hour featured Phyllis Schlafly discussing outsourcing of American jobs to China and the impact on the middle class.
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Mark Koernke and guest John Stormer discussed the historical foundations of American law rooted in biblical principles and the Constitution, contrasting them with communist and socialist infiltration of American institutions. Stormer discussed his book 'None Dare Call It Treason' and its warnings about communist influence in education, churches, and government. The hosts examined how the Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission, and other organizations have systematically undermined American sovereignty, particularly through economic dependence on China and the outsourcing of defense manufacturing. They addressed the corruption of the judicial system, the abandonment of constitutional principles, and the gradual implementation of communist planks through education reform and institutional infiltration.