"14th amendment"
20 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed militia organization, preparedness, and current geopolitical threats during this evening broadcast. Topics included FEMA deployment in Oklahoma City, Ukrainian military conscription and alleged demographic replacement, biological weapons labs in Ukraine, gas mask procurement and NBC defense, ammunition production shortages, weather manipulation via HAARP, and the role of Israeli and international NGOs in coordinating border invasion. The show featured caller Dave Stone reporting Russian strategic rocket forces in Venezuela and nuclear artillery movements toward Ukraine.
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Mark Koernke discussed military recruitment failures and warned listeners against joining the U.S. military, citing leadership controlled by what he characterized as satanic and pedophilic elements. He covered the military's failed attempts to recruit soldiers previously discharged for refusing COVID-19 vaccines, emphasized the importance of militia training and map-reading skills, reviewed firearms and ammunition availability at Center Fire Systems, and discussed the 14th Amendment's disputed ratification. The show included caller commentary on military service experiences and recruitment advertising, along with warnings about border security failures and illegal immigration.
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This episode was a compilation broadcast featuring multiple hosts and segments from Liberty Tree Radio. The first segment covered night vision equipment sales and communications techniques. The second major segment, hosted by Spike Timmons, discussed the Malaysian Airlines plane crash over Ukraine, NSA surveillance and blackmail tactics used against government officials and citizens, and included extensive discussion of Ted Turner's comments supporting military suicides. The third segment, hosted by JD, covered Memorial Day history and General Smedley Butler's anti-war writings about soldiers dying for banker profits rather than freedom. The final segment continued discussion of sovereign citizen extremist ideology as defined by the Department of Homeland Security, with hosts arguing that the government mischaracterizes constitutional rights advocates as terrorists.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Civil War as a pivotal moment in American history orchestrated by bankers and financial interests, examining how events like the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Dred Scott decision, and Uncle Tom's Cabin were used to incite sectional conflict. He analyzed the role of the Federal Reserve, the loss of common law, and the centralization of power through unconstitutional means. The show also covered current events including vaccine dangers, immigration policy, the Biden administration's composition, and the destruction of American culture through diversity initiatives and educational indoctrination. Callers discussed firearms, ammunition availability, and preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the 14th Amendment as unlawful acts that destroyed constitutional governance and replaced common law with civil law controlled by men in power. He read extensively from historical documents including Jeremiah Black's 1860 Attorney General opinion on presidential war powers, analyzed Abraham Lincoln's unconstitutional suspension of habeas corpus and imposition of martial law, and examined the role of Judah P. Benjamin as a Rothschild agent who allegedly influenced Confederate strategy. The show covered ammunition availability, reloading techniques, medical preparedness items, and plans for developing alternative ammunition solutions. Callers contributed information on over-the-counter medications, survival supplies, and ammunition sourcing.
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The host discussed COVID-19 as a potential fraud and bioweapon, citing doctors who claim the virus was never properly isolated. He covered the 14th Amendment as unconstitutional and discussed Lincoln's role in centralizing federal power. The show included extensive quartermaster segments featuring ammunition and tactical gear pricing from various suppliers, discussions of thermal evasion techniques, and commentary on government overreach, corporate consolidation, and cultural Marxism.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 14th Amendment's illegal ratification and its role in centralizing federal power, the Civil War as a communist revolution, reconstruction as cultural genocide, and contemporary threats to constitutional rights including gun control legislation in Oregon. He analyzed historical documents showing the 14th Amendment was never properly ratified and used to justify federal overreach. The show included extensive discussion of preparedness, ammunition and firearm availability, and warnings about government threats to liberty.
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Mark Koernke discussed the erosion of common law and natural rights in America, tracing the shift from law based on God and nature to judge-made law divorced from morality. He analyzed the January 6th Capitol incident, presenting witness accounts suggesting government involvement and questioning official narratives. The show covered nursing home deaths under Governor Cuomo, critical race theory and identity politics as tools of control, the Civil War as a planned destruction of the South, and the 14th Amendment as illegitimate and foundational to federal overreach. Koernke warned of an impending government-sponsored bombing attack and called for local militia action to restore constitutional governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional law, the Federal Reserve's history, and current political developments. He analyzed Congressman McFadden's 1933 speech on the Federal Reserve, debated the Trading with the Enemy Act's application to citizens, and covered Biden administration policies including military purges for alleged extremism. Callers contributed perspectives on ammunition availability, rifle selection, and concerns about vaccine mandates for healthcare workers and vulnerable populations.
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Mark Koernke discussed Biden's executive orders and their unconstitutionality, analyzed the two-government system (the original constitutional republic versus the federal territorial government established 1908-1918), examined the 14th Amendment's questionable ratification, critiqued the treatment of National Guard troops at the Capitol, addressed ammunition and weapons availability, and emphasized the need for armed resistance and militia organization to restore constitutional government and common law.
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Mark Koernke discussed the historical origins of police forces in America, tracing their development to slave-catching bounty systems and connections to fraternal organizations with masonic ties. He explored the relationship between the decline of militia functions and the rise of organized police states, and examined how federal banking systems enabled bounty collection. The episode featured extended discussion of contemporary political figures including Stacey Abrams (identified as a Council on Foreign Relations member), Oprah Winfrey as a change agent, and comparisons to Nikki Haley's role at the UN. Koernke criticized Black Panther activism as divide-and-conquer tactics, discussed the 14th Amendment's role in corporate control, and advocated for sovereign citizenship and independence from government systems. The latter portion of the transcript became increasingly fragmented and difficult to parse.
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This episode featured two distinct segments. The first half, hosted by Tony Pan-Telaresco on the Micro Effect Broadcasting Network, focused on health, environmental contamination, and technology dangers. Pan-Telaresco discussed chemtrails, glyphosate poisoning, nano-constructs in soil, cell phone addiction and electromagnetic frequencies, and the spraying of sodium fluoroacetate in New Zealand as a form of population control. He emphasized correlating health issues to environmental exposures and promoted detoxification through diet and supplements. The second half, hosted by Charlotte on "One Nation Under Fraud," shifted to political and social commentary, analyzing anti-white rhetoric in academia, discussing Noel Ignatiev's "abolish whiteness" ideology, critiquing Marxist influence in universities, and examining how psychological warfare and divide-and-conquer tactics have been used against white populations and working people.
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Mark Koernke discussed due process rights with callers Joseph, Jason, Charlotte, and others, explaining how citizens must demand proper due process when confronted by authorities and courts that lack legal standing. The show featured extended commentary on the 2016 presidential election between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, with critical remarks about political leadership and foreign influence. Koernke also addressed topics including preparedness, ammunition storage and reloading, tactical gear, and broader critiques of American institutions, education, and government overreach, interspersed with product advertisements and philosophical discussions about American values and constitutional rights.
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Mark Koernke discussed the influx of Central American migrants and the mechanisms driving their movement northward, arguing that NGOs and government-sponsored operations were orchestrating bus convoys and providing plane tickets to facilitate migration into the United States. He criticized the use of migrants as tools for social engineering and compared the current situation to historical patterns of exploitation, including references to the Civil War and the 14th Amendment. Koernke emphasized that the real motivation behind these operations was not humanitarian but rather driven by globalist and internationalist agendas designed to destabilize American society. He also critiqued the media's failure to report on regional economic conditions and political dynamics across various U.S. states, arguing that public attention had been deliberately diverted from local issues.
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Mark Koernke and co-hosts discussed media manipulation, psychotropic drugs, and government control on May 27, 2014. Callers raised concerns about Hollywood's role in desensitizing the public through films like The Lawnmower Man and Faces of Death, the potential for guerrilla radio broadcasts to counter mainstream media lies, and the judicial system's lack of accountability. The hosts analyzed a recent stabbing incident in California, questioning official narratives about the number of perpetrators and weapons used, while promoting alternative media sources and soliciting donations to keep the Micro Effect Radio Network operational.
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Mark Koernke discussed citizenship status and political determination, citing historical legal documents from the 1830s and the Law of Nations by Vattel to explain how individuals can declare themselves US nationals rather than 14th Amendment citizens, thereby changing their legal and tax status. He then read extensively from Jerome Frank's 1933 speech 'Experimental Jurisprudence and the New Deal' delivered to the American Association of Law Schools, arguing that New Deal lawyers used experimental legal techniques to expand government power. The show included a caller, Myron from Pennsylvania, asking about citizenship status changes and non-resident alien designations in tax code, with Koernke explaining the distinction between residents and non-residents under the 14th Amendment and Title 26 tax regulations. The broadcast also featured announcements about a drawing for a Kenwood transceiver and discounted AR-22 rifle components.
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Mark Koernke and Joe discussed Thanksgiving's historical origins, explaining how early colonists initially practiced communal farming that led to starvation, then switched to private property ownership which resulted in abundance. Caller Ray Hall promoted his four-year-in-development book 'The Rise and Fall of Freedom in America,' a three-volume set teaching constitutional principles and legal remedies for reclaiming sovereignty. Hall detailed chapters on foundational legal concepts, fraud by syntax, the proper role of government, and practical methods like filing affidavits to establish sovereign status and challenge government jurisdiction. Mark and Joe emphasized the importance of understanding legal rules and foundational principles to navigate the court system, citing examples of pro se defendants successfully challenging government authority and discussing the case of Michael Lexie, a Michigan veteran who faced institutional retaliation for asserting sovereign rights.
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Mark Koernke discussed the federal debt ceiling crisis and government spending priorities, arguing that wealth comes from the people and land, not government, and that the government is a parasitic entity. He criticized the Obama administration's threats to withhold Social Security and veteran benefits, arguing that elderly citizens and military veterans who built the nation's wealth should be paid first before bankers and foreign aid. Koernke also discussed the 14th Amendment as a tool of indentureship and compared current economic policies to slavery. He called for Americans to organize as militia, equip and train as teams, and fight intelligently against what he characterized as an illegitimate government controlled by international bankers, while explicitly rejecting rioting.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional issues including the alleged unlawful ratification of amendments since the Civil War, the importance of filing freedom documents to exit the corporate system, and the critical Alaska Senate GOP primary where conservative Joe Miller held a narrow lead against incumbent Lisa Murkowski, warning that desperate politicians would deploy lawyers to manipulate ballot counting. He extensively analyzed the Korea situation as a distraction from more pressing issues like economic destruction and sovereignty loss, explained the UN's role in the Korean War as a setup to constrain American military operations, and warned that defeated senators would act as vengeful "headless chickens" causing maximum damage through the lame duck session. Koernke urged listeners to monitor the Senate, recall senators using state constitutional powers, and prepare for potential civil unrest as Americans increasingly reject federal authority.
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Mark Koernke discussed the fraudulent system of penal bonds and birth certificate monetization, explaining how the U.S. government trades citizens as commercial property through bonds worth millions of dollars each. He detailed how prisoners are cataloged as financial instruments, how the Secretary of the Treasury can be compelled to disclose bond information, and how citizens unknowingly surrender sovereignty through contracts like Social Security and driver's licenses. Koernke advocated for Ron Paul's presidential candidacy as a peaceful solution and discussed the 14th Amendment's role in enabling voluntary servitude. He also promoted his book series and multimedia projects, including a planned television adaptation of Battle for the Republic.