"blackwater"
16 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed Eric Prince's Fox News interview about Afghanistan withdrawal and military capability, analyzing Prince's evasion of questions about domestic threats. The show covered Chinese UN forces allegedly training at Camp Grayley in Michigan, NATO command structure changes with foreign officers taking control of U.S. operations, and the Biden administration's handling of military casualties in Afghanistan. Koernke addressed military families' negative reactions to Biden, recommended preparedness items including solar lights and tactical gear from various suppliers, and discussed ammunition availability including WWII-era Winchester .303 British and Turkish 30-06 rounds.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Afghanistan withdrawal and its geopolitical implications, analyzing an Eric Prince interview where the mercenary contractor avoided addressing questions about potential domestic military deployment. Koernke criticized the incompetence of U.S. military and intelligence leadership, drew parallels to the Vietnam War, and discussed the bombing at Kabul airport attributed to ISIS-K. The show featured extensive product recommendations for preparedness including solar lights from Dollar Tree, tactical gear from Sportsman's Guide, vehicle storage panels from Coleman, and safety equipment from Major Surplus, with emphasis on medical supply stockpiling and self-sufficiency.
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Mark Koernke discussed federal taxation policy, criticizing the 9-9-9 tax plan as a deceptive scheme that would ultimately increase to 27-30 percent. He analyzed the Osama bin Laden raid narrative, questioning the logistics of a two-hour firefight and ammunition supply. Koernke addressed troop withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan, comparing current military strategy to Nixon-era Vietnam tactics and discussing the use of private military contractors. He engaged with caller Don about geopolitical strategy and concluded with commentary on progressive socialism, the Declaration of Independence debate, and the need for American resistance to globalist forces.
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Mark Koernke discussed the debt ceiling crisis and government spending priorities, arguing that Social Security recipients and military veterans should receive their payments before any debt ceiling increase. He criticized both political parties as equally corrupt, discussed Blackwater's relocation to Washington D.C., and spent considerable time on agricultural and environmental topics including crop production, buffalo herds, and debunking climate change narratives. Caller Don from Edgewood contributed commentary on government employee priorities and the need to protect senior citizens and veterans.
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Frank Whalen returned from a two-week break to discuss major news stories, primarily focusing on CIA Director Leon Panetta's June 27, 2010 comments about Afghanistan. Panetta stated that Al Qaeda presence in Afghanistan numbers only 50 to 100 people at most, yet the U.S. maintains 93,000 troops and 130,000 contractors there at enormous cost. Whalen argued this reveals no legitimate military objective in Afghanistan and discussed how private security contractors pay millions weekly in bribes to Taliban and insurgent groups to move supplies. He also covered Panetta's comments on the Taliban's current weakness, Osama bin Laden's presumed death since the early 2000s, and Iran's uranium enrichment. Caller Andrew from Michigan contributed discussion on lithium mining in Afghanistan, heroin production, and the broader resource extraction agenda.
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On October 8, 2008, Mark Koernke and co-host Donald Butcher discussed the Cook County, Illinois sheriff's refusal to enforce foreclosures, framing it as a historic victory against the New World Order. They emphasized the importance of local militia readiness, the need for Americans to develop alternative currency systems, and the critical role of sheriffs in resisting federal overreach. Guest Bruce presented survival snare-trapping techniques and equipment for self-sufficiency. The hosts stressed that conflict is imminent and that Americans must prepare materially, arm themselves, and spread awareness to family and community members.
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Mark Koernke and guest Michael Messer discussed military deployments, border security concerns, and preparedness topics on April 8, 2008. The show covered the 10th Mountain Division's deployment to the southern border, alleged ATF harassment and property seizure activities, legal discovery procedures for defendants, and a meeting held in Durant, Oklahoma covering communications, medical training, and survival skills. Callers reported on surveillance infrastructure along I-95 in Florida and military activities at Fort Drum, New York, with discussion of potential domestic crisis scenarios and population control mechanisms.
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Mark Koernke discussed mercenary training of local police officers, particularly Blackwater and other private military contractors operating domestically, urging listeners to document their activities through photography and video. He covered preparedness topics including radiation protection with potassium iodate and vitamin K, field survival techniques for moisture management in equipment, and the importance of proper storage of medical supplies. Koernke analyzed a bombing at a recruiting center in Times Square, questioning the official narrative and drawing parallels to past false flag operations. He took calls from George in Florida regarding the Seattle WTO protests and government infiltration tactics, and from Rod in Texas regarding planted evidence (a switchblade) in a traffic stop, advising immediate complaint to state police for evidence tampering.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 Iowa caucuses and Ron Paul's campaign, analyzing media bias and vote-counting concerns while encouraging grassroots support. He critiqued mainstream media's engineering of political coverage, particularly Fox News's exclusion of Ron Paul from the New Hampshire debate, and explained how radio stations screen and select callers to shape narratives. Koernke addressed the militarization of police through Blackwater training, the decline of the U.S. military as intentional policy, and the importance of veterans supporting Ron Paul. He emphasized grassroots organizing, distributing Ron Paul literature, and the role of younger voters in the patriot movement.
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Mark Koernke discussed the economic collapse in Michigan with one-third of houses in foreclosure, tracing it to NAFTA and GATT trade policies pushed by Clinton, Gore, and both Bush administrations as part of a Council on Foreign Relations agenda to destroy American economic sovereignty. He analyzed the Iraq War as an illegal occupation driven by mercenary contractors and Israeli Mossad influence, criticizing the torture at Abu Ghraib and the failure of military leadership to hold senior officers accountable. Koernke emphasized the psychological toll on returning soldiers, noting approximately 120 Iraqi War veterans committing suicide monthly, and urged listeners to support these veterans directly rather than through psychiatric systems. He endorsed Ron Paul for president as the only candidate willing to challenge these entrenched power structures.
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Mark Koernke discussed the deterioration of the U.S. military through overseas contracting, mercenary forces, and equipment attrition in Middle Eastern conflicts. He emphasized Ron Paul's presidential campaign, urging listeners to donate to a one-day fundraising drive and a December 16th $10 million goal. Koernke addressed veterans' psychological struggles, encouraging them to seek peer support rather than psychiatric services, and warned that globalist forces are deliberately weakening American military capability to prevent resistance to a New World Order agenda. He fielded calls about Blackwater's border operations, Pearl Harbor, and ammunition specifications.
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Mark Koernke discussed weapons and equipment preparation for combat readiness, covering load-bearing equipment configurations, magazine distribution strategies, ammunition management, and proper gear maintenance. He addressed caller Eric from California regarding border security and immigration issues, explaining the broader geopolitical context of foreign troop presence in the United States and mercenary operations. Koernke presented photographic evidence of German and UN-marked military vehicles deployed on U.S. soil, connected these observations to border security failures, and discussed historical military conflicts within the U.S. government structure, including references to the 1972-1973 period and potential civil war scenarios.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, currency strategy, and geopolitical concerns on October 15, 2007. He covered the Knob Creek machine gun shoot, ammunition scarcity and sourcing strategies, and advised listeners to acquire euros as insurance against currency collapse and potential foreign occupation. Koernke emphasized Ron Paul's presidential campaign, warned about foreign military participation in domestic exercises, and stressed the importance of personal preparedness including gas masks, food reserves, and ammunition stockpiling. He also promoted his book series and took caller questions about government drills and foreign troop involvement.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Ron Paul rally held at the University of Michigan, which drew over 2,000 attendees and was described as one of the best rallies in the country. He analyzed the Iraq War situation, focusing on Turkish military operations in Kurdistan, mercenary activities by private military contractors like Blackwater, and alleged Israeli involvement in directing American troops to commit atrocities against Iraqi civilians. Koernke also addressed concerns about UN forces training on American soil, Canadian military presence at Grayling, Michigan, and the use of foreign troops in potential domestic operations. He criticized the mainstream media's coordinated messaging against Ron Paul and discussed the IRS as a tool of government control.
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Mark Koernke discussed police provocateurs at protests, particularly analyzing videos from Quebec and Seattle showing undercover officers inciting violence among peaceful demonstrators. He emphasized the importance of recognizing and publicly identifying government agents in crowds, detailed the infrastructure needed for militia organization beyond just armed personnel, addressed concerns about federal infiltration of militia groups, and took calls from listeners including a military veteran describing provocateur activity on a college campus and a caller reporting on a contaminated FEMA building in Pennsylvania.
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Mark Koernke hosted a multi-caller discussion covering border security failures, government contractor abuses in post-Katrina New Orleans, preparedness and supply stockpiling, and an executive order affecting Iraq stabilization efforts. Callers from Michigan, Texas, Louisiana, and other regions reported on militia mobilization efforts, National Guard inadequacy, FEMA mismanagement, Blackwater and private military contractor operations, and the need for state-level border defense. The show emphasized grassroots organization, self-sufficiency, and resistance to federal overreach.