"gold confiscation"
12 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke hosted the Intelligence Report on October 22, 2025, covering multiple topics across three hours. The first hour focused on Windows 11 update 25H2, discussing Microsoft's forced installation and privacy concerns, followed by detailed discussion of firearms including Glock reliability, SIG 320 malfunctions, and the potential for counterfeit weapons. The second hour featured guest Craig from Forbidden Knowledge discussing military policy, the Department of War, the Epstein files, Charlie Kirk's death, and predictions of war and false flags. The third hour included co-host Dave Stone discussing preparedness, archery, air rifles, iron sights, and cold weather gear, along with caller discussions about gold confiscation, currency alternatives, and militia organization.
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Mark Koernke discussed voter fraud in Michigan, specifically detailing a Gateway Pundit report about fraudulent voter registrations at a Detroit coffee shop address (12041 Dexter Avenue) linked to Israeli operatives and the Jewish mob. He covered federal law enforcement procurement of Glock 19 pistols replacing SIG 320s, analyzed the planned expansion of federal police forces into cities, and promoted Thomas Massey as a presidential candidate for 2028. The show included discussions on preparedness, AR-15 and G3 rifle building, gold confiscation history, and warnings about imminent government actions.
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Mark Koernke discussed Michigan's solar farm installations, criticizing their inefficient design and role in removing productive farmland from circulation. He analyzed wind turbine failures, poor construction quality, and government waste. The show covered gold confiscation history, the 1933 Gold Act, and propaganda efforts to devalue precious metals. Koernke addressed Trump's security vulnerabilities, the assassination attempts against him, and criticized Trump's focus on golf rather than election preparation. He discussed Hezbollah's military effectiveness compared to Israeli operations, emphasizing the importance of commitment, standard operating procedures, and decentralized command structures in warfare. The final hour covered MRE rations, supply logistics, and the need for Americans to prepare for conflict and reject government overreach.
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Mark Koernke discussed winter weather in Michigan, criticized media narratives around climate change and preparedness, and addressed political issues including immigration policy, the Clinton family, healthcare costs, and pharmaceutical monopolies. He expressed frustration with what he characterized as government overreach, the replacement of American workers with immigrants, and the use of Christianity against patriots. Koernke also reflected on historical banking crises and advocated for self-sufficiency and resistance to federal control.
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Mark Koernke discussed financial markets, retirement security, and political unrest. He criticized the stock market as rigged and manipulated by international bankers, contrasting it with the 1929 crash and FDR's subsequent policies that he characterized as attacks on American private interests and gold ownership. Koernke drew parallels between 1933 and present-day government overreach, discussing how retirement funds have been stolen and how citizens are being targeted. He extensively analyzed Antifa violence, arguing that the group is communist-funded and that law enforcement is complicit by standing down. Koernke called for direct action against what he termed terrorist organizations and criticized the government's failure to track funding sources through FinCEN.
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Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed weapons systems and caliber comparisons, including Russian versus American .50 caliber ammunition and field scavenging of military equipment from World War II. They covered holster designs and firearm carry methods, then shifted to federal attacks on gun ownership targeting Social Security Disability recipients with fiduciaries, comparing this to historical gold confiscation in 1933. The hosts analyzed commodity market manipulation through futures contracts and discussed precious metals as wealth preservation, emphasizing physical ownership over paper holdings and the importance of building local economies based on honest money and mutual benefit.
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Mark Koernke discussed FDR's 1933 declaration of war against the American people, the confiscation of gold, and the role of General Smedley Butler in the so-called "Business Plot." He argued that Butler, despite his military heroism, ultimately sided with FDR rather than with those willing to resist the regime's seizure of private property and establishment of socialist policies. Koernke connected these historical events to current government overreach, warning that similar patterns of control through executive orders and property confiscation continue today. The show included technical discussion about Dell computer equipment donations and calls from listeners debating Butler's legacy and the nature of American resistance to federal tyranny.
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On September 22, 2008, Mark Koernke and Michael Nessert discussed multiple topics including 9/11 conspiracy theories, government overreach through moped licensing and contractor fraud in disaster areas, precious metals investment and bank confiscation risks, casino monopolies and money laundering, and military deployment of the 1st Brigade Combat Team for domestic riot control starting October 1st under the John Warner Defense Authorization Act. The show concluded with a medical segment on burn treatment and first aid.
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Mark Koernke discussed his recent travels across Texas, Iowa, Arkansas, and other states, describing observations of burned wreckage along roadways and upcoming patriot initiatives including a Patriots trivia game and militia organization manuals. He delivered an extensive historical lecture on American sovereignty, the Bar Association's British origins, the missing 13th Amendment banning titles of nobility, Andrew Jackson's resistance to bankers, the Civil War as a banker-orchestrated conflict, and FDR's 1933 gold confiscation executive order. Koernke emphasized the need for Americans to understand constitutional law and reclaim their nation from foreign banking interests.
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Mark Koernke discussed the federal raid on the Liberty Dollar facility, arguing it was politically motivated to suppress Ron Paul commemorative coins ahead of the 2008 presidential election. He connected the raid to broader themes of government control over currency and hard assets, drawing historical parallels to 1933 and the confiscation of gold and safety deposit boxes. Koernke urged listeners to immediately withdraw valuables from bank safety deposit boxes and called for rapid production of Ron Paul coins in base metals or copper to counter the government's actions. Guest Mark DeWitt from Michigan provided updates on Ron Paul's campaign schedule and volunteer efforts, emphasizing the importance of grassroots outreach before the primaries.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, government overreach, and preparedness strategies. He analyzed The Wizard of Oz as an allegory for the Federal Reserve and gold confiscation, connecting it to the 1933 seizure of American gold and the establishment of fiat currency. Koernke and guest Dave explored legal tools available to citizens, including George Gordon's School of Common Law and Erwin Rommel School of Law, which use bond litigation and fraud documentation to challenge government authority. The show covered the Korean War as a case study in government betrayal and UN manipulation, featuring caller George's questions about the Venona Papers and State Department treason. Koernke emphasized that resistance requires combined action—legal, informational, and militia-based—rather than a single solution, and urged listeners to distribute show information and engage in activism.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Joint Service Training Combat Arms Survey (DD Form 3208), a military questionnaire from the early 1990s that tested whether soldiers would fire on American citizens resisting firearms confiscation and accept foreign military command. He covered the history of gun control in America, linking the 1933 Gold Confiscation Act and Gun Control Act to broader globalist efforts to disarm citizens, and argued that registration always precedes confiscation as seen in Australia and England. Koernke promoted Ron Paul as the best Second Amendment candidate, warned against appeasing enemies of the Constitution, discussed psychiatric drugs' role in mass shootings, and took a call from John in Massachusetts about surveillance infrastructure (fiber optic cables) being installed across the country. The show emphasized armed resistance to tyranny, rejected compromise with anti-gun forces, and called listeners to distribute educational materials about these threats.