"bush administration"
9 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed military-industrial complex corruption, including historical examples from the Bush and Johnson administrations' profiteering from wars. He analyzed the Iraq War's missing military equipment and looted antiquities, comparing it to Nazi and Napoleonic plundering. The show covered tank design philosophy, the MiG-25's superiority, and PT Cruiser tracking technology. Koernke reported on confirmed surveillance of aggressor forces in Michigan using signal communications, praised operatives monitoring anti-gun sessions at the Judiciary Committee in Washington, and announced weekend training activities at Camp Niagara and OGMA-3 range.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2009 swine flu outbreak, criticizing government and CDC failures to contain the virus at its source in Mexico and secure the U.S. border. He argued that despite advance warning and resources, authorities allowed infected individuals to cross into the United States. Caller Dave provided market reports on stocks, metals, and commodities, then discussed census fraud, including how zip codes are used to misallocate congressional districts and how census data is illegally sold to commercial companies. The show covered concerns about invasive census questions and the history of county incorporation as a tool for government control. Mike then provided preparedness advice on maintaining first aid supplies and medical equipment before emergencies occur, followed by detailed medical training on airway management techniques including oral pharyngeal airways, nasal pharyngeal airways, and endotracheal intubation.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed Pearl Harbor and 9/11 as false flag operations, arguing that the U.S. government deliberately withheld information and sacrificed military personnel to justify wars. They examined historical parallels between the suppression of Pearl Harbor truth and post-9/11 narratives, discussed nihilism and terrorism as concepts originating with Russian revolutionaries and Jewish organizations, criticized the NRA's compromise on gun control legislation, analyzed suspicious financial market activity and oil price manipulation, and presented a 2000 newspaper article proving the military anticipated aerial terrorism before 9/11 despite later claims of surprise.
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Mark Koernke discussed post-9/11 geopolitical events, including the anthrax attacks and their targeting of anti-war politicians rather than war hawks, suggesting Israeli involvement. He criticized the Bush administration's Middle East policies and CFR membership, analyzed the 2001 patriotic fervor and subsequent decline in American symbolism, and took calls from listeners about state sovereignty, the Oklahoma City bombing (which he attributed to federal agencies and Mossad), and psychiatric restrictions on Second Amendment rights. The show covered themes of government deception, false flag operations, preparedness, and constitutional rights.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and voter strategy, critiqued NAFTA and GATT trade agreements signed by Bill and Hillary Clinton for destroying American wages and jobs, and drew parallels between socialist control tactics in East Germany and current U.S. government overreach. He addressed border security failures, alleged Chinese container scanning waivers, and speculated on potential terrorist attack scenarios on the U.S. East Coast. The show included caller George from Florida discussing illegal aliens and terrorism at the southern border, MS-13 gang violence, and misuse of Romans 13 by churches receiving 501c3 status.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, encouraging listeners to create grassroots promotional materials and organize support across all 50 states. He covered a caller's report on a new Bush executive order restricting anti-war protest activities and seizing assets of dissenters, linking it to historical ADL involvement in post-WWII police state actions. The show featured updates on border security efforts by the Minutemen in Arizona, the Great Plains Corridor meeting in Denver in September, and organizational restructuring of militia groups to operate with distributed leadership rather than centralized command.
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Mark Koernke discussed government corruption, infiltration of organizations by clandestine elements, and the manipulation of both political parties by the Council on Foreign Relations. He explained the distinction between corporate entities (written in capitals) and constitutional government, criticized both Republican and Democratic administrations for perpetuating wars and socialist policies, and warned against compromising on constitutional rights like gun ownership. In the second half, Koernke and co-host Don emphasized practical preparedness through salvaging and repurposing everyday items like nails, lighter flints, and tungsten from light bulbs, and discussed currency devaluation and rising prices of imported goods.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed a major civil rights victory in which California agreed to pay nearly $1 million to settle a lawsuit by the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club over a 1998 police raid that killed three dogs and violated constitutional protections. The hosts explained how public officials are not immune from liability and detailed the importance of personal bonds versus public bonds in holding government accountable. They also covered the Teamsters Union lawsuit against the Bush administration for illegally implementing a pilot program to allow Mexican trucking companies to operate across U.S. borders without proper safety standards or public comment periods. The show promoted Ramsey Electronics kits for building micro FM transmitters as a way to spread patriotic information, and discussed strategies for citizens to file pro se legal actions against companies and officials involved in border betrayal and constitutional violations.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed the history of federal overreach against militia and patriot movements, focusing on the Ruby Ridge siege (1992) and the planned attack on the Weaver family, which was documented on video by militia members who prevented the family's murder. They covered the systematic targeting of gun owners and tax protesters under the Bush Sr. administration, the connection between Ruby Ridge and Waco, and the importance of grassroots preparedness and self-sufficiency. Caller Drew from Mississippi, recently released from incarceration, shared insights on government corruption and discussed the Knob Creek militia meetings and the Freeman siege in Montana. The hosts emphasized alternative energy solutions (corn burners, solar power, steam cars), ammunition stockpiling, hunting skills as defensive capability, and the mathematical formulas used by elites to manipulate the economy and control populations.