"domestic violence"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, food security, and political commentary during this three-hour episode. He emphasized the importance of stockpiling humanitarian rations and MREs, noting that military rations are now cheaper than grocery store food due to inflation and shrinkflation. Koernke covered concerns about government-engineered crises, potential civil unrest from food stamp cuts, and the threat of power grid manipulation. He also featured a Guns and Gadgets segment on New York's new mandatory firearm seizure law during domestic violence calls, discussed radio programming and Baofeng radios for communications, and addressed international tensions involving Venezuela, Israel, and Ukraine. Throughout the episode, he promoted end-of-year fundraising drawings and urged listeners to prepare for potential supply chain disruptions.
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Mark Koernke discussed breaking news on Senate negotiations for a bipartisan gun control bill, including red flag laws and the "boyfriend loophole" provision. He analyzed the bill's implications for Second Amendment rights, criticized 13 Republican senators voting for gun confiscation measures, and expressed frustration with both major political parties. The show featured extensive commentary on government overreach, the IRS ammunition purchases, school grooming issues, and calls for armed resistance against what he characterized as tyrannical policies.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness infrastructure including wireless technology, fiber optic systems, and CB radio frequencies for communication networks independent of government control. He promoted James Wesley Rawles' new novel 'Survivors: A Novel of the Coming Collapse' and encouraged patriot broadcasters to promote the book. The show featured extended caller segments addressing CPS (Child Protective Services) cases in Michigan, discussing government overreach in family matters, welfare dependency, and domestic violence situations. Koernke also covered the case of Randy Kelton, a pro se litigator in Texas imprisoned for practicing as a private investigator without a license, characterizing him as a political prisoner.
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Mark Koernke opened with a Phyllis Schlafly Report segment on constitutional rights for men accused of domestic violence, criticizing loose definitions of domestic violence in family courts and calling for reform of the Violence Against Women Act. The bulk of the episode covered border security issues, drug trafficking operations, and currency tracking, with Koernke arguing that federal authorities knowingly allow large drug shipments across the U.S.-Mexico border while targeting small-time dealers, and that electronic tracking technology on currency enables the government to locate major drug operations but chooses not to. He discussed military-grade weapons appearing in drug busts, the role of organized crime syndicates in trafficking, and the disparity between government surveillance of citizens versus enforcement against major criminal enterprises.