"christmas gifts"
9 episodes tagged with this keyword
-
Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and Christmas gift recommendations, emphasizing ammunition, magazines, weapons, and tools as essential items. The episode featured an extended technical discussion with caller Don about night vision technology, including first and second-generation devices, white light versus green screen considerations, tactical deployment of illuminators, and historical military applications of night vision. Don provided detailed guidance on concealing white light emissions, adapting thermal devices, and employing night vision in combat scenarios. The show also covered rifle grenade launchers, cascading fire tactics, and lessons from World War II German and Russian night operations.
-
Mark Koernke and Larry Lawson discussed escalating geopolitical tensions, including U.S. military deployments in Eastern Europe, the Ukraine conflict, and potential false flag operations to justify domestic martial law. They emphasized preparedness through ammunition stockpiling, fuel storage, and alternative transportation (mopeds, bikes). The hosts promoted armed resistance rhetoric, citing historical examples like the Finnish Winter War and Hezbollah, and urged listeners to give weapons and ammunition as Christmas gifts as a statement of readiness. They also covered concerns about Israeli military actions, banking corruption, and the need for self-sufficiency.
-
Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and self-sufficiency topics including alternative health treatments using chelation therapy and herbal remedies like nettle tea. He emphasized the importance of Cinco de Ammo Day (buying ammunition on Fridays), explaining how consumer demand drives ammunition production and inventory. Koernke covered vehicle preparedness, highlighting the 1967 Chevy pickup truck as a civil defense vehicle designed to survive nuclear situations and EMP. He promoted long-term storage solutions including coal for heating, candles for indefinite storage, and recommended specific retailers for ammunition, firearms, and survival supplies. The show included advertisements for Lisa K Candles, Kettle Moraine precious metals, and various firearms dealers.
-
Mark Koernke opened with a patriotic poem, then discussed preparedness and ammunition selection, recommending affordable ball ammunition for standardization across militia units. He reviewed firearms available through J&G Sales, particularly the Kel-Tec SU-16 semi-automatic rifle and Chinese surplus rifles, emphasizing reliability and affordability. Koernke addressed the Phil Robertson Duck Dynasty controversy, arguing that the left preaches tolerance until gaining dominance, then silences dissent. He discussed surplus military gear available through government liquidation sites, particularly ACU camouflage and Bundeswehr combat belts, and promoted equipment from KeepShooting.com and other vendors as Christmas gifts for militia preparedness. The show included caller discussion about rifle specifications and featured advertisements for emergency candles and other survival products.
-
Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, firearms, and communications equipment on December 17, 2013. He reviewed firearms inventory and pricing at JG Sales, including M14 magazines, AK-style rifles, and handguns, noting inflated prices due to market conditions. The bulk of the episode focused on improvised radio antenna construction using dollar-store materials like tape measures, insulators, and zip ties, and detailed field telephone systems using salvaged rotary phones powered by solar cells. Koernke also highlighted military surplus equipment available through Fair Radio and other vendors, including weather balloons, switchboards, and specialized communications gear, while encouraging listeners to send postcards to the station's PO Box.
-
Mark Koernke discussed Christmas gift ideas for preparedness and self-defense, focusing heavily on AR-15 rifles customized in pink with Hello Kitty designs for women and girls. He promoted several vendors including Liberty's Guardian, Aries Armor, JG Sales, and Centerfire Systems, offering discounted magazines, ammunition, and firearm components. The show included a lengthy caller segment with Bill discussing DIY surveillance camera systems using surplus electronics from websites like ldine-s.com, covering miniature camera circuits, older video equipment repurposing, and lens optics for security and monitoring applications.
-
Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed preparedness for Christmas, emphasizing weapons, ammunition, magazines, and tactical gear as appropriate gifts. They covered night vision technology options ranging from first to third generation devices with pricing, airsoft training tools as cost-effective alternatives to live fire practice, and reloading components and techniques. Don Betcher promoted his 1776 Men magazine series on handgun fundamentals and reloading manuals. The hosts discussed ammunition scarcity solutions including the .22 Hornet cartridge as an alternative to .22 rimfire, improvisation techniques for casting bullets with gas checks, and the importance of maintaining inventory of scrap materials for future component fabrication. They announced a broadcast test of a new randomized music playlist on Live 365 to address delisting problems.
-
Mark Koernke opened the December 9, 2013 morning broadcast with commentary on winter weather in Michigan, Pearl Harbor Day, and the State of Jefferson movement. He promoted the use of Jefferson currency ($2 bills, dollar coins, nickels) as a grassroots advertising strategy and discussed multiple firearms retailers offering holiday sales, including Centerfire Systems (99-cent mag pouches), CDN Investments (AR-15 and pistol magazines), Del-Ton (complete AR-15 rifle kits for $475-$480), and ammunition availability. Koernke also solicited donations to support Joe McNeil and encouraged listeners to purchase firearms, ammunition, and magazines as Christmas gifts. He concluded with commentary on a viral "knockout game" incident and used animal predation metaphors to discuss societal threats.
-
Mark Koernke discussed militia training exercises, gun shows, and preparedness gift ideas for the upcoming holidays. He addressed border security issues, criticizing media narratives about weapons trafficking from the US to Mexico and explaining how readily available components could be improvised. Koernke warned about anti-gun legislation in Virginia and criticized the NRA's historical compromises on gun control. He also discussed Israeli police training programs at US law enforcement agencies and fielded a caller's question about gas mask selection and filter expiration, recommending surplus military masks as cost-effective alternatives to expensive new models.