"constitutional law"
21 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, weapons systems, and constitutional law on Weapons Wednesday, September 13, 2023. The show covered affordable firearm options (AR-15s, Terra TP9 pistols), water purification techniques, communications equipment (Antron antennas, 10-meter radios), and medical supply caches for militia support. Koernke addressed New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham's gun carry ban, analyzing it through constitutional and oath-of-office frameworks. Guest Craig from Forbidden Knowledge discussed Liberty Safe's compliance with FBI warrant requests, vehicle ownership rights litigation, and legal strategies for challenging government overreach. The broadcast emphasized preparedness for potential conflict and warned of Operation Blue Sky, a planned 40-nation telecommunications exercise scheduled for the following day.
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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 David Chipman's nomination as ATF director, characterizing him as a dangerous figure involved in the Waco siege. The show featured extensive analysis of the 1993 Branch Davidian siege, including detailed accounts of federal overreach, military involvement, and defensive actions by Branch Davidians. Koernke covered Idaho's strengthened sanctuary state law against Biden's gun control executive orders, discussed the Ohio vaccination lottery scheme as propaganda, and explored constitutional law concepts including writs of habeas corpus and sovereign contract rights. The second hour included caller discussions about Carl Miller's legal victories against the state, the nature of violence and coercive force in resistance, and technical analysis of military vehicles including the Bradley fighting vehicle and proposed 50mm gun turret modifications.
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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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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 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 the precautionary principle from UNESCO, the North American Union agenda, Quebec secession movements, and connections between globalist organizations and controlled opposition groups like the Oath Keepers. He analyzed a long article detailing how the Quebec separation movement was orchestrated by communist elements and the Power Corporation of Canada, and how similar regional government structures are being implemented across North America. The second hour covered Operation Binary Blackout (a FEMA exercise to simulate power and water outages), the FBI raid on Allure Medical for offering intravenous vitamin C therapy for COVID-19, and practical quartermaster advice on ammunition, surplus equipment, and night vision procurement.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional governance, cooperative federalism, and the structure of the federal government system. He analyzed how the IRS operates as an agency of a foreign government (the United States of America, a political alliance distinct from the original constitutional United States), explained the distinction between two separate governmental entities created through reorganization plans, and detailed how federal agencies exceed their constitutional authority in the states of the Union. The show featured extensive discussion of Dan Meador's research on federal overreach, the Federal Reserve's role in consolidating power, and how citizens have been deceived about their legal status and the true nature of government jurisdiction.
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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 voter fraud concerns, particularly regarding padded voter rolls and early voting irregularities, and debated whether election fraud should constitute treason. The show covered constitutional law distinctions between high crimes and misdemeanors, critiquing the expansion of federal law and the role of lawyers in creating bureaucratic complexity. Callers and Mark discussed surplus military equipment procurement, including pistol belts, gas masks, and tactical gear from Maine Military, with detailed guidance on proper fit and configuration. The episode also featured extensive discussion of preparedness supplies, freeze-dried food storage, and precious metals as financial insurance.
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Mark Koernke discussed military gun restrictions at Fort Carson, Colorado and Fort Campbell, Kentucky, drawing parallels to similar policies from 1992 and arguing they represent government disarmament of troops to use families as hostages. He extensively analyzed American constitutional history, the role of British law and admiralty law in subverting the republic, the alteration and destruction of legal documents including Title 50 United States Code, and historical figures like Thomas Paine and Alexander Hamilton. Koernke also addressed geopolitical conflicts, criticizing Israeli foreign policy, discussing World War I and planned world wars, and emphasizing the need for grassroots preservation of American liberty and constitutional principles.
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Mark Koernke discussed Y2K preparedness efforts, claiming Americans successfully thwarted a planned crisis through citizen preparation and vigilance. He criticized the federal government's dismantling of airport backup systems, installation of fiber optic surveillance infrastructure, and the subsequent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as distractions from domestic tyranny. Koernke argued the patriot movement achieved victories despite setbacks, addressed caller concerns about police checkpoints and law library purges, and condemned what he characterized as infiltration of universities by progressive administrators and homosexual staff.
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Mark Koernke discussed American history and sovereignty, focusing on British imperial influence over the United States from the Revolutionary War through the present day. He covered the Bar Association's contamination of the legal system, the implementation of surveillance infrastructure disguised as birdhouses, and the Global Synchronous Property Survey System designed to control land through satellite monitoring and purchasing caps on building supplies. Koernke fielded calls from listeners including Al from South Dakota on property rights and the Levelers, and George from Florida on military service and resistance to tyranny, emphasizing the need for Americans to actively defend constitutional freedoms rather than submit passively.
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Mark Koernke discussed his recent travels across Texas, Iowa, Arkansas, and other states, describing observations of burned wreckage along roadways and upcoming patriot initiatives including a Patriots trivia game and militia organization manuals. He delivered an extensive historical lecture on American sovereignty, the Bar Association's British origins, the missing 13th Amendment banning titles of nobility, Andrew Jackson's resistance to bankers, the Civil War as a banker-orchestrated conflict, and FDR's 1933 gold confiscation executive order. Koernke emphasized the need for Americans to understand constitutional law and reclaim their nation from foreign banking interests.
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Mark Koernke hosted the second hour of the Intelligence Report from Brave New Books in Austin, Texas on July 28, 2008. The episode covered constitutional rights, jury nullification, and the citizen's rule book as tools for enforcing the Bill of Rights. Koernke discussed illegal immigration as part of a larger straw man bond monetization scheme targeting new populations as chattel property, contrasting benefits given to illegal aliens versus American citizens. He promoted an upcoming militia training event (August 14-17) in Arizona organized by Off the Grid Girls, emphasizing the need to train trainers and double militia membership. The show included caller Paul from Delaware discussing cult definitions and immigration policy, followed by announcements about Freedom School streaming and Brave New Books' location and services.
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Mark Koernke discussed corporate infiltration of local government, the illegitimate nature of admiralty courts, and strategies for fighting back through constitutional law and jury nullification. He addressed callers about county charters being replaced by corporate bylaws, the gold-fringed flag as a symbol of maritime jurisdiction, and the need to establish common law courts. The show covered preparedness topics including gas masks and gardening for self-sufficiency, and promoted an upcoming April meetup in Oklahoma for training and community building.
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Nancy Cornkey and Larry Lawson hosted the second hour of the Intelligence Report, discussing the assassination of Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and its geopolitical implications, the ACLU's efforts to remove nativity scenes from public spaces in small towns like Dexter, Michigan, and the importance of supporting Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign. They emphasized constitutional governance, criticized pharmaceutical company immunity from lawsuits, discussed the Veterans Disarmament Bill's impact on disabled veterans, and addressed 9/11 conspiracy theories including controlled demolition of Building 7. Callers contributed perspectives on legal strategies against unconstitutional laws and Ron Paul's fundraising success.
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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 Donald Betcher hosted Weapons Wednesday on November 28, 2007, focusing on combat load preparation and firearm equipment. The show emphasized purchasing surplus military equipment while available, particularly magazine pouches and maintenance tools for AK and AR-15 platforms, noting that prices increase over time as supplies dwindle. Guest Larry Pratt of Gun Owners of America discussed Second Amendment jurisprudence, the distinction between individual and collective rights, and recent court cases including the San Francisco handgun ban challenge, emphasizing the constitutional protection of the people's right to bear arms and the importance of the 9th and 10th Amendments in defending that right.
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Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed constitutional law, court procedures, and federal overreach on May 24, 2007. Guest Dave from Arkansas shared investigative legal research on penal bonds and pro se litigation strategies, while Dave from New York explained how document filing determines court jurisdiction and described evidence tampering in court records. The hosts covered gun rights, school safety, and criticized the immigration bill debated in Congress that night, which included provisions for mandatory housing of federal agents in private homes—a violation of the Third Amendment. They also discussed Agenda 21 implementation through federal funding strings and the dangers of late-night congressional votes with minimal attendance.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional governance, cooperative federalism, and the structure of the federal government system. He analyzed how the IRS operates as an agency of a foreign government (the United States of America, a separate entity from the original United States), explained the distinction between the original constitutional republic and the current administrative state, and detailed how the Federal Reserve and various reorganization plans have created a second government that operates outside constitutional authority. The show covered preparedness for the coronavirus situation, reviewed various suppliers for ammunition, firearms, and survival gear, and discussed the importance of understanding true history and legal structures to recognize how citizens have been placed under territorial jurisdiction rather than constitutional protection.