"constitutional oath"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2016 presidential election, focusing heavily on Project Veritas videos documenting alleged election rigging and voter fraud coordinated by Hillary Clinton's campaign. He criticized mainstream media coverage, analyzed potential civil unrest following the election, and explored geopolitical implications of a Clinton presidency including UN involvement and gun confiscation. The show included extensive caller discussion about election fraud documentation, military loyalty concerns, and international military intervention scenarios.
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Mark Koernke discussed historical military preparedness and improvisation across World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq, contrasting Hollywood's sanitized portrayals with the reality of troops lacking equipment and supplies. He criticized media coverage for avoiding unflattering narratives about Democratic administrations' wars while focusing on later-war periods, highlighted the betrayal of Iraqi allies and the rise of ISIS, and emphasized the need for decentralized ammunition stockpiling and NBC defense preparedness among civilians in anticipation of potential conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, law enforcement accountability, and tactical preparedness in response to potential government overreach. He addressed a threatening caller who accused patriots of advocating violence, then pivoted to analyzing police willingness to strike for pay versus defending the Constitution, suggesting a "blue flu" could prevent officers from participating in gun confiscation operations. The show focused extensively on Connecticut's elimination of sheriffs and the implications for state control, followed by detailed tactical and logistical guidance for travel and operations in contested areas, including map reading, GPS limitations, vehicle formations, and communications. Guest Don Betcher provided information on night vision technology and first-generation gun sights, emphasizing the importance of physical maps over electronic navigation.