"ffl dealer"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke and caller Darryl discussed a gun buyback program operated by Cobra Tactical, funded by the Reese Family Trust with $10 million, offering $50-$250 per firearm. They analyzed the program's suspicious elements, including that Cobra Tactical manufactures AR-15 components and may be acquiring guns to strip for parts and resale to law enforcement. The show also covered affordable preparedness gear from KeepShooting.com, including woodland camo fitness suits and French military pouches, and reviewed AR-15 upper receivers and kits from Ares Armor and Del-Ton, discussing receiver manufacturing and ammunition commonality across rifle platforms.
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Mark Koernke discussed federal overreach in firearms sales, specifically addressing an ATF case involving a gun seller prosecuted for selling to an illegal alien with a valid driver's license. He criticized the ATF's alleged targeting of white gun sellers while ignoring the actual illegal buyer, and explained FFL dealers' legal authority under the Gun Control Act of 1968 to refuse sales. The show featured extensive technical discussion of shotgun maintenance, particularly the Ithaca Model 37, magazine adapters for cross-platform rifle compatibility, and militia organization principles based on fire team and squad structures. Callers contributed questions about firearm pricing, maintenance procedures, and organizational tactics.
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Mark Koernke discussed mass shooting incidents and gun control rhetoric on Weapons Wednesday. He analyzed the Virginia Tech shooting and copycat threats in Michigan, arguing that gun control advocates misuse such incidents to push disarmament while ignoring that automobiles kill more people annually. Koernke promoted the High Point Carbine as a practical self-defense weapon and fielded a caller from Rochester, New York, who reported multiple school shooting threats and the arrest of an FFL dealer for possessing AR-15s in his dorm, which Koernke argued was legally protected under federal firearms licensing. The show emphasized preparedness, the right to bear arms, and skepticism toward mainstream media narratives surrounding mass violence.