"common law"
32 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed classified document handling procedures and the Bolton case, explaining mandatory security protocols and potential charges. He analyzed a Department of Justice brief attempting to limit Second Amendment relief to only named plaintiffs rather than all Americans, contrasting Admiralty Court commerce law with common law. Koernke warned of planned economic devaluation, property foreclosures, and military deployment on American soil as part of a broader agenda to destroy American sovereignty and the Bill of Rights, attributing these actions to Israeli and international banking interests. He called for armed militia organization and preparation for conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed World War I ordnance production, militia training manuals, and small-unit manufacturing as solutions to preparedness. He covered communications infrastructure including FRS radios, marine radio networks, and alternate technologies. The second hour featured extensive commentary on alleged coordinated lawfare against Trump, corruption in the judicial system, and warnings about imminent nuclear war and foreign invasion. Callers raised concerns about Russian-Ukrainian conflict, Mexican government infiltration, and the need for armed militia organization.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional law concepts including jurisdiction, legal fictions, and admiralty law, with callers debating the distinction between common law and administrative courts. The show covered preparedness topics including walnut hull processing for iodine production, natural food sources like acorns and chicory, and the importance of maintaining diverse medicinal and nutritional supplies. Koernke also addressed current events including police shootings, immigration policy, and the Trump legal proceedings, arguing these represent communist overreach rather than legitimate governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed the $1.7 trillion omnibus spending bill passed by Congress, criticizing both Democrats and Republicans for approving legislation without proper debate or amendment process. He played a video of a congressman denouncing the bill's passage during a lame-duck session and emphasized that Congress has constitutional mechanisms—including congressional courts under common law and the sergeant-at-arms—to hold executive agencies accountable but refuses to use them. Koernke also covered preparedness topics including clothing storage, candle procurement, Corelle dishware preservation, sewing supplies, and the importance of organizing militia units with five-man fire teams and ten-man squads.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2022 midterm election results, expressing concern about anti-gun candidates winning office across multiple states including Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, and others. He analyzed election irregularities, particularly in New York where identical vote counts were added simultaneously across all counties. Koernke emphasized the importance of constitutional law, specifically the Bill of Rights and common law protections, arguing that states cannot legally restrict Second Amendment rights. He addressed preparedness topics including water storage, food rationing, iodine supplementation, tool maintenance, battery shortages, and windup watches as alternatives to electronic timekeeping. The show included extensive discussion of training equipment, airsoft and BB guns as training aids, and practical survival preparations for potential conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Hornady ammunition company's vaccine mandate letter requiring employees to be vaccinated by December 8, 2021, using a Guns and Gadgets video as a foundation. He analyzed the mandate in the context of communist takeover tactics, drawing parallels to how East Germany eliminated private businesses by progressively lowering employee thresholds. Koernke encouraged listeners to walk away from jobs enforcing mandates, praised those choosing to leave as the critical thinkers needed for rebuilding, and discussed the importance of identifying enemies versus allies during what he characterized as an ongoing soft civil war. He also addressed violence against white people, the knockout game, flash mobs, and broader themes of government overreach, corporate complicity, and the need for community organization and common law understanding.
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Mark Koernke discussed eugenics, population control, and the Biden administration's nominee for Bureau of Land Management who advocated reducing American births for environmental reasons. He covered the history of eugenics from Darwin and Malthus through the X Club and Thomas Huxley, examined suppressed scientific paradigms involving light and biophysics, and critiqued vaccine mandates, gun control legislation, and government overreach. The show included extensive discussion of preparedness, ammunition reloading, medical supplies, and tactical equipment.
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Mark Koernke discussed the ongoing war against the American people, focusing on COVID-19 vaccine concerns, government corruption, critical race theory, the Doctrine of Discovery, and preparedness strategies. He covered topics including pandemic supply shortages, the need for strategic reserves of PPE, the history of land conquest doctrine, federal overreach in education, and practical survival skills like cobbling and equipment maintenance. The show included caller discussions on regional government structures, currency systems, and the importance of preserving American history and heritage.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, militia history, and preparedness during this evening broadcast on May 14, 2021. The show covered Second Amendment sanctuary state legislation, the Carl Miller raid in Michigan during the 1990s, body armor specifications, vaccine mandates and their implications, and the need for organized resistance to federal overreach. Koernke emphasized the importance of local militia organization, proper manufacturing and self-sufficiency, and understanding the historical patterns of government control through education and social engineering.
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Mark Koernke discussed international law, natural law versus positivism, property taxation as serfdom, and the systematic removal of morality from legal systems. He covered the history of law from ancient Greece and Rome through the Peace of Westphalia, critiqued modern legal theories that divorce law from ethics, and warned that communitarian law combined with corporate control threatens individual property rights and freedom. The show included extensive discussion of quartermaster logistics, military preparedness, firearms procurement, and militia organization, with callers contributing perspectives on state police, foreign policy after a potential conflict, and current gun control threats.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, militia organization, logistics for preparedness, and police training by Israeli forces. The show covered the Article 5 convention threat to the Constitution, COVID-19 vaccine concerns, police brutality cases including George Floyd and Ma'Khia Bryant, and detailed information about Israeli police training programs influencing U.S. law enforcement tactics. Callers contributed discussions on common law, medical preparedness, body armor sourcing, and night vision equipment.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Civil War as a pivotal moment in American history orchestrated by bankers and financial interests, examining how events like the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Dred Scott decision, and Uncle Tom's Cabin were used to incite sectional conflict. He analyzed the role of the Federal Reserve, the loss of common law, and the centralization of power through unconstitutional means. The show also covered current events including vaccine dangers, immigration policy, the Biden administration's composition, and the destruction of American culture through diversity initiatives and educational indoctrination. Callers discussed firearms, ammunition availability, and preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the 14th Amendment as unlawful acts that destroyed constitutional governance and replaced common law with civil law controlled by men in power. He read extensively from historical documents including Jeremiah Black's 1860 Attorney General opinion on presidential war powers, analyzed Abraham Lincoln's unconstitutional suspension of habeas corpus and imposition of martial law, and examined the role of Judah P. Benjamin as a Rothschild agent who allegedly influenced Confederate strategy. The show covered ammunition availability, reloading techniques, medical preparedness items, and plans for developing alternative ammunition solutions. Callers contributed information on over-the-counter medications, survival supplies, and ammunition sourcing.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, militia preparedness, and government overreach during this afternoon broadcast. He covered topics including executive orders and their unconstitutionality, COVID-19 vaccine concerns and adverse effects, the January 6th Capitol incident narrative, gun control threats, and the need for militia coordination and training. Koernke emphasized rifle marksmanship discipline, magazine maintenance, and defensive positioning for the anticipated conflict he believes is imminent. He also discussed the history of government infiltration, the Federal Reserve system, and what he characterized as a coordinated war against the American people through various means including vaccines, lockdowns, and media manipulation.
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The host discussed COVID-19 as a potential fraud and bioweapon, citing doctors who claim the virus was never properly isolated. He covered the 14th Amendment as unconstitutional and discussed Lincoln's role in centralizing federal power. The show included extensive quartermaster segments featuring ammunition and tactical gear pricing from various suppliers, discussions of thermal evasion techniques, and commentary on government overreach, corporate consolidation, and cultural Marxism.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 14th Amendment's illegal ratification and its role in centralizing federal power, the Civil War as a communist revolution, reconstruction as cultural genocide, and contemporary threats to constitutional rights including gun control legislation in Oregon. He analyzed historical documents showing the 14th Amendment was never properly ratified and used to justify federal overreach. The show included extensive discussion of preparedness, ammunition and firearm availability, and warnings about government threats to liberty.
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Mark Koernke discussed the erosion of common law and natural rights in America, tracing the shift from law based on God and nature to judge-made law divorced from morality. He analyzed the January 6th Capitol incident, presenting witness accounts suggesting government involvement and questioning official narratives. The show covered nursing home deaths under Governor Cuomo, critical race theory and identity politics as tools of control, the Civil War as a planned destruction of the South, and the 14th Amendment as illegitimate and foundational to federal overreach. Koernke warned of an impending government-sponsored bombing attack and called for local militia action to restore constitutional governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional law, the Federal Reserve's history, and current political developments. He analyzed Congressman McFadden's 1933 speech on the Federal Reserve, debated the Trading with the Enemy Act's application to citizens, and covered Biden administration policies including military purges for alleged extremism. Callers contributed perspectives on ammunition availability, rifle selection, and concerns about vaccine mandates for healthcare workers and vulnerable populations.
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Mark Koernke discussed the constitutional crisis facing America, focusing on emergency powers that have been in effect since 1933 and how they have been used to suspend constitutional protections. He analyzed the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917 and subsequent legislation that expanded executive authority, examined equity courts and their role in undermining common law, and discussed the implications of admiralty jurisdiction being applied to American citizens on land. The show covered HR 127 gun registration legislation, the stock market manipulation involving GameStop and Robin Hood, and warnings about potential false flag operations. Callers contributed perspectives on legal remedies, the Whitmer kidnapping case, and various preparedness and quartermaster topics.
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Mark Koernke discussed Biden's executive orders and their unconstitutionality, analyzed the two-government system (the original constitutional republic versus the federal territorial government established 1908-1918), examined the 14th Amendment's questionable ratification, critiqued the treatment of National Guard troops at the Capitol, addressed ammunition and weapons availability, and emphasized the need for armed resistance and militia organization to restore constitutional government and common law.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, government fraud, and preparedness on January 15, 2021. The show covered election fraud allegations, federal overreach, the Capitol building incident (which Koernke characterized as staged), thermal signature reduction technology, firearms and ammunition sourcing, and communications security. Koernke emphasized the need for alternative communications systems, local government accountability, and self-sufficiency in light of what he described as communist infiltration of the U.S. government.
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Mark Koernke discussed the January 6 Capitol incident, characterizing it as a staged false flag operation orchestrated by federal agents and Antifa rather than genuine Trump supporters. He analyzed Mayor Muriel Bowser's response, critiqued Biden and Harris as ineligible for office, and extensively covered constitutional law, the militia, ammunition availability, and preparedness strategies including medical supplies, food storage, and improvised weapons. The show featured multiple callers debating the Capitol events, election fraud, and the need for armed resistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional law, common law versus commercial law, and the COVID-19 pandemic as a coordinated attack on American freedoms. He analyzed how federal courts abandoned common law principles through cases like Swift v. Tyson and Erie Railroad v. Tompkins, replacing them with positive law. The show covered Michigan Governor Whitmer's executive orders restricting movement and commerce, protests in Lansing, and alleged government overreach. Koernke presented theories linking COVID-19 to 5G deployment, chemtrails, and vaccines, while discussing FEMA's unconstitutional emergency powers and the need for militia organization and common law restoration.
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Mark Koernke discussed cooperative federalism, the construction of a second government through the Federal Reserve and reorganization plans, and the fraudulent nature of the IRS as an agency of a foreign entity (the United States of America, a political alliance distinct from the constitutional United States). He analyzed how the system uses double-mindedness, deception, and control of narrative to subjugate individuals, drawing on writings by Dan Meador. The show covered the coronavirus panic as a tool for control and money extraction, preparedness recommendations, and the need for Americans to understand their true legal status and resist federal encroachment. Callers discussed Virginia's gun control laws, the government's intentional failure to quarantine plague carriers, and the growing secession movements in various states.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional government, the Babylonian legal system, and cooperative federalism as mechanisms of control over American citizens. He analyzed the 1937 Declaration of Interdependence as a secret governmental coup that replaced constitutional republic with regional government structures. The show covered the UCC commercial code, the Federal Reserve's control of the economy, and how states were converted into federal territories. In the second hour, callers discussed coronavirus preparedness, food storage, ammunition availability, and militia organizing in Michigan. The evening segment featured detailed discussions on gas masks, filters, isopropyl alcohol sterilization, and survival preparations during potential quarantine.
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Mark Koernke discussed government fraud, subversion, and infiltration on this episode. He read extensively from historical texts about Deuteronomy and its influence on political ideology, then examined how Frankist and crypto-Jewish families infiltrated Western institutions over centuries. The show covered the two-tiered legal system in America, the destruction of constitutional law, and how cooperative federalism has created a fictional second United States. In the second hour, the program shifted to practical preparedness topics including ammunition availability, gas mask selection, and supplies for potential quarantine scenarios related to coronavirus concerns.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Declaration of Independence on the second anniversary of what he characterized as socialist occupation of America, reading the full text and listing the signers. He analyzed a 1994 Cessna incident at the White House, comparing it to the 9/11 Pentagon attack and questioning the official narrative. Callers contributed perspectives on the founding fathers, the Commerce Clause, common law rights, and updates on political prisoner Gail Lynn Lomaster in Minnesota.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional threats including the 1995-1996 constitutional convention (con-con) movement, which aimed to replace the Bill of Rights with a new states constitution that would centralize federal power. He emphasized the importance of grassroots organizing and community-based solutions, advocating for patriots to relocate to depressed rural towns and establish constitutional governance at the local level. The show featured a segment on night vision equipment availability and pricing, and concluded with a caller discussing nuclear proliferation concerns regarding North Korea, with Koernke addressing chemical and biological weapons deployment scenarios.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Michael Desser discussed income tax law and constitutional rights with guest Mr. R, who promoted Peter Hendrickson's book 'Cracking the Code' as the definitive resource on understanding the Sixteenth Amendment and income tax statutes. The conversation covered the distinction between common-law income (fruits of labor, which cannot be taxed) and privileged income (government employment, which can be taxed), the history of tax withholding beginning in 1937 with Social Security, and the importance of proper legal notice and contract principles. The hosts also addressed federal overreach, the voluntary nature of Social Security and military drafts, property rights, and border security issues in Arizona, while criticizing both major political parties for expanding the police state regardless of which held power.
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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.
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Mark Koernke and guest Doug Hudson, author of 'How Governments Disarm Citizens,' discussed constitutional rights, the Bill of Rights, and how government has systematically undermined citizen liberties through administrative law and the commerce clause. They analyzed the Federalist and Anti-Federalist Papers, examined the original 13th Amendment banning titles of nobility, and explained how licensing agreements convert rights into privileges. The conversation covered the founding fathers' intent to limit government power, the importance of private property rights, and the need for citizens to understand and defend their constitutional protections.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional governance, Babylonian law systems, and cooperative federalism as mechanisms of control over American states and citizens. He analyzed the 1937 Declaration of Interdependence as a secret governmental coup that replaced constitutional republic with regional government structures. The show covered the UCC commercial code, the role of the American Law Institute and Bar Association in dismantling common law, and how federal agencies have systematically converted states into territories. Callers raised concerns about Virginia's demographic changes, immigration policy, and the coronavirus pandemic as a potential cover for economic collapse and digital currency implementation. The second hour featured quartermaster discussions on rifle procurement, ammunition, preparedness supplies, and gas mask availability amid pandemic concerns.