"controlled media"
8 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the political landscape ahead of the November 2010 midterm elections, focusing on the need for newly elected candidates to fire all existing federal staff and bureaucrats to break the entrenched system. He analyzed Rahm Emanuel's departure from the White House to run for Chicago mayor as a strategic repositioning by the administration, warned of potential false-flag operations or wars with Iran to consolidate power, and emphasized the importance of internet radio and grassroots activism in countering government propaganda. He also discussed fusion center operations, word-sculpting in controlled media as a communication tool for elites, and the critical importance of personal preparedness.
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Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed firearms training, marksmanship, and preparedness on August 26, 2010. The show featured a detailed historical account of Wild Bill Hickok's gunfighting techniques and emphasized the importance of weapon proficiency through practice, Airsoft training, and muscle memory development. Koernke criticized mainstream media attacks on shooting programs like Appleseed, defended the quality of patriot-led training initiatives against government standards, and addressed internal movement divisions and misinformation. The hosts also discussed the limitations of controlled commercial radio compared to independent patriot broadcasting, using Coast to Coast AM as an example of censorship.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, ammunition availability, and tactical equipment on April 1, 2008. The show covered a trucking strike developing across the United States, the importance of gas masks and ammunition stockpiling, and featured discussions on tactical backpacks (MOLLE systems) and medical preparedness. Callers and guests including Tom and Mike addressed ammunition sourcing, alternative calibers like 5.45x39, and close-quarters combat training with edged weapons. The episode also touched on media suppression of the trucking strike story and included extensive discussion of constitutional rights and government overreach.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 Iowa caucuses and Ron Paul's campaign, analyzing media bias and vote-counting concerns while encouraging grassroots support. He critiqued mainstream media's engineering of political coverage, particularly Fox News's exclusion of Ron Paul from the New Hampshire debate, and explained how radio stations screen and select callers to shape narratives. Koernke addressed the militarization of police through Blackwater training, the decline of the U.S. military as intentional policy, and the importance of veterans supporting Ron Paul. He emphasized grassroots organizing, distributing Ron Paul literature, and the role of younger voters in the patriot movement.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Becker discussed the controlled media's role in promoting wars and the neoconservative agenda, contrasting the post-9/11 patriotism surge with pre-9/11 vilification of constitutional patriots. They analyzed the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, questioning who benefited and the CIA's involvement in regional politics. The hosts emphasized alternative information distribution methods—from cassettes to the internet—as tools to preserve knowledge suppressed by centralized library systems and mainstream media. They also addressed geothermal activity and natural climate cycles, critiquing the global warming narrative, and promoted Ron Paul's presidential campaign as the authentic constitutional alternative to establishment candidates.
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Mark Koernke discussed ammunition scarcity and sourcing strategies, providing detailed information about affordable ammunition suppliers including Centerfire Systems and Georgia Arms. He addressed caller concerns about infrastructure and organization within the patriot movement, emphasizing the historical depth of militia networks and the importance of jury nullification. Koernke also discussed Ron Paul's presidential campaign, the December 16th Boston Tea Party fundraising event, and criticized the controlled media's suppression of patriot movement visibility, citing a specific incident at the Michigan Capitol building where news cameras were deliberately shut down during a UN protest.
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Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed solar activity and climate science, noting that extreme solar flares in 2006 reached unprecedented levels (56 on the scale versus the previous maximum of 11) that the mainstream media and climate advocates like Al Gore deliberately omitted from their reporting. They then pivoted to historical examples of information suppression, citing cannibalism in medieval France and references in Victor Hugo's Hunchback of Notre Dame, arguing that controlled media omits critical facts just as climate scientists do. The hosts emphasized the importance of the patriot press providing complete information to enable rational decision-making, recounted a confrontational appearance on a liberal radio station where they successfully challenged hosts through factual argument, and discussed their ongoing media projects including audio drama adaptations and detention camp documentation videos. Callers contributed observations about helicopter crashes, military-industrial complex concerns, and government surveillance through news helicopters.
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Mark Koernke discussed Y2K preparedness and the role of the Patriot movement in preventing a potential crisis, explaining how government agencies and military prepared extensively while the media suppressed coverage of actual Y2K failures. He detailed a major gun rights protest in Columbus, Ohio that drew nearly a million people but received no network coverage, contrasting media blackouts with their coverage of illegal immigration protests. Koernke analyzed Ron Paul's strong performance in an MSNBC poll following a Republican debate, arguing that Paul's consistency and focus on constitutional issues threatened establishment candidates who could only attack the messenger rather than debate his positions. Callers discussed Paul's medical background, the Ohio Valley Gun Collectors Association's relocation from Columbus due to anti-gun legislation, and concerns about federal control and taxation.