"defense manufacturing"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed widespread power outages affecting Michigan, attributing them to infrastructure failures caused by the use of inferior NAFTA-grade replacement parts instead of quality American equipment. He analyzed geopolitical military developments, particularly China's merchant marine fleet capabilities and potential for rapid carrier conversion, drawing historical parallels to World War II shipbuilding. Koernke warned about the planned closure of Northrop Grumman's New Orleans shipyard, which would eliminate 100,000 jobs, and characterized this as part of a deliberate globalist agenda to transfer American industrial capacity overseas. He also discussed stock market manipulation, precious metals pricing, and the broader economic implications of outsourcing defense manufacturing to Communist China.
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Mark Koernke discussed the incoming Obama administration's parallels to FDR's New Deal, criticizing federal overreach, gun control measures, and the outsourcing of defense manufacturing. He covered militia reorganization efforts in Michigan, Virginia, and the Carolinas, including the formation of a Colonial Marines divisional command. Caller Andrew from Ohio reported on an ATF program documenting federal law enforcement operations in Chicago, New Orleans, and Bowling Green, Kentucky, with Koernke analyzing the case of a man who held off 120 federal agents for four days and questioning the federal jurisdiction in what appeared to be a local matter.
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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.