"columbine high school"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
-
Mark Koernke and guest Michael Nasser discussed a home invasion incident in Phoenix, Arizona involving heavily armed individuals allegedly connected to Mexican military personnel, which they argued was being covered up by mainstream media and authorities. The show covered the Supreme Court's Heller decision on the Second Amendment, which Koernke characterized as a distraction from larger threats, and discussed the history of gun control legislation including the 1968 Gun Control Act's parallels to Nazi Germany's 1938 laws. The second half featured medical training on treating gunshot wounds and shock, including field medical procedures, IV administration, and casualty care protocols. Callers discussed mental health legislation, Prozac-related mass shootings, and the role of educational institutions in government operations.
-
Mark Koernke discussed mass shooting incidents, alleging government involvement in programming shooters and suppressing witness testimony, citing the Dearborn post office shooting and Columbine as examples. He covered preparedness topics including communications infrastructure, ammunition coding legislation, and ethanol production as alternative fuel and food sources. Callers contributed information on rail activity, internet shutdown drills, and Kosovo's independence as a model for ethnic conflict in America.
-
Mark Koernke and co-host Don Betcher interviewed author John Stormer about his seminal book 'None Dare Call It Treason,' originally published in February 1964, which documented communist infiltration in American institutions. Stormer discussed how he researched and self-published the book, which eventually sold over six million copies, and explained efforts by academic institutions like the University of Michigan to restrict access to it and similar patriotic literature. The show covered themes of communist influence in education, the suppression of conservative thought in libraries, the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and ATF involvement, the Columbine High School shooting and its connection to curriculum promoting death and suicide classes, and recent federal weapons raids in Alabama. Koernke emphasized the importance of citizens documenting government overreach and staying vigilant against what he characterized as ongoing threats to constitutional freedoms.