"agenda 21"
6 episodes tagged with this keyword
-
Mark Koernke discussed eugenics, population control, and the Biden administration's nominee for Bureau of Land Management who advocated reducing American births for environmental reasons. He covered the history of eugenics from Darwin and Malthus through the X Club and Thomas Huxley, examined suppressed scientific paradigms involving light and biophysics, and critiqued vaccine mandates, gun control legislation, and government overreach. The show included extensive discussion of preparedness, ammunition reloading, medical supplies, and tactical equipment.
-
Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, food storage, and seed selection during the April 23, 2020 broadcast. He emphasized acquiring beans, peanuts, and other bulk foods from feed mills and stores at discounted prices, detailed selective breeding techniques for heirloom seeds, and explained how to establish mini-greenhouses using aquariums. The show covered Michigan's governor's lockdown policies and hypocrisy, caller concerns about government overreach during the coronavirus pandemic, and detailed instructions for making medicinal tinctures with cayenne pepper and other herbs. Koernke framed the pandemic response as a communist takeover agenda and urged listeners to identify and document those complying with restrictions.
-
Mark Koernke discussed constitutional law, common law versus commercial law, and the COVID-19 pandemic as a coordinated attack on American freedoms. He analyzed how federal courts abandoned common law principles through cases like Swift v. Tyson and Erie Railroad v. Tompkins, replacing them with positive law. The show covered Michigan Governor Whitmer's executive orders restricting movement and commerce, protests in Lansing, and alleged government overreach. Koernke presented theories linking COVID-19 to 5G deployment, chemtrails, and vaccines, while discussing FEMA's unconstitutional emergency powers and the need for militia organization and common law restoration.
-
Mark Koernke discussed the COVID-19 pandemic as a staged event and hoax, covering alleged government overreach, food supply threats, vaccine dangers, and Bill Gates' depopulation agenda. The show featured extensive analysis of coronavirus testing protocols, vitamin supplementation for immune support, economic impacts of lockdowns, and calls for food production and resistance to government mandates. Callers contributed discussions on protests in Michigan and Ohio, seed availability, and preparedness strategies.
-
Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and quartermaster topics on the evening of October 7, 2011. He covered the 25th anniversary of the 1985 Philadelphia MOVE bombing, drawing parallels to Ruby Ridge and Waco as examples of government overreach. The show focused heavily on food storage and supply chain concerns, including reports of imminent price increases for rice, beans, pasta, and sugar. Koernke and his co-host BK recommended specific preparedness resources: James Wesley Rawls's "Survivors: A Novel of the Coming Collapse," water filtration systems from SAFE H2O UV and Doulton USA, and a free food inventory spreadsheet. They emphasized strategic stockpiling of consumables like ammunition, water filters, and lantern mantles over capital equipment, and discussed broader concerns about agricultural consolidation through trade agreements like NAFTA 2.
-
Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed constitutional law, court procedures, and federal overreach on May 24, 2007. Guest Dave from Arkansas shared investigative legal research on penal bonds and pro se litigation strategies, while Dave from New York explained how document filing determines court jurisdiction and described evidence tampering in court records. The hosts covered gun rights, school safety, and criticized the immigration bill debated in Congress that night, which included provisions for mandatory housing of federal agents in private homes—a violation of the Third Amendment. They also discussed Agenda 21 implementation through federal funding strings and the dangers of late-night congressional votes with minimal attendance.