"field surgery"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed militia training standards, medical preparedness and field surgery capabilities, and extensively analyzed Hezbollah as a model of effective heavy infantry militia operations. He criticized Dan Bongino and other political figures as controlled opposition, addressed the 250th anniversary of American independence as a symbolic target for destruction, and covered preparedness logistics including ammunition sourcing, thermal equipment, and upcoming militia training operations across multiple states.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness topics including medical supply organization for militia units, with focus on first aid kits (IFACs), hemostatic wound spray products, and field surgical capabilities. He addressed caller questions about earthquake activity in Maine and Michigan, archive access for past broadcasts, and provided extensive information on firearms magazines (AR-15 and Glock mags from Rainier Arms) and ammunition selection. The show included discussion of medical training for irregular forces, wound treatment protocols, and historical context of chemical weapons from World War I.
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Mark Koernke discussed medical preparedness and field medical kit organization, emphasizing standardized packing of medical bags with consistent contents so field medics can locate supplies in darkness. He covered medical equipment sourcing from airsoft retailers, the importance of dedicated medical radio frequencies to avoid interference during casualty care, and techniques for repurposing medical supplies from hospice and home care situations. A caller from Arizona provided operational details about a planned field deployment along the southern border running from late August through early November, involving reconnaissance, area security, and rotation of personnel, with discussion of terrain, weather conditions, and anti-tracking considerations.
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Mark Koernke discussed federal government overreach, particularly regarding the IRS, Obamacare enforcement, and medical debt collection. He addressed the Bundy Ranch situation as an example of government targeting productive citizens, criticized the 1933 War Powers Act declaration making Americans enemies of the state, and emphasized the need for medical preparedness including field surgery training and blowout kits. Callers shared personal experiences with medical debt and military service, leading to discussions about accountability within the armed forces and the infiltration of communist ideology in federal agencies.