"cordless phones"
5 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed solar flare activity and its effects on communications, ham radio operations, and satellite technology. He provided detailed information about purchasing flares and ammunition from UNAMMO.com, including contact details for the owner Cali. Koernke addressed the Bundy Ranch situation, characterizing the BLM as agents of communist Chinese interests and warning of expanded land restrictions. He covered alleged biological weapons attacks including diseases from the southern border and Ebola, and predicted a third attack involving Haitian migrants. The show included extensive technical discussion of battery packs, cordless phones as improvised communication and surveillance devices, and repurposing vehicle and electronic components for various applications.
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Mark Koernke discussed low-tech communications and surveillance technologies for border security and emergency preparedness, including CB radios, wireless cameras, RC drones, and DIY solutions using salvaged equipment. He emphasized the importance of alternative communications infrastructure independent of cell phone systems, detailed how to repurpose old cordless phones and handheld radios as transceivers, and provided practical advice on battery maintenance and equipment storage. The show also covered micro-broadcasting equipment, signal generators for local television stations, and criticized media coverage of the Pacific garbage patch as lacking substantive imagery.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and self-sufficiency strategies, including detailed instructions on repurposing salvaged solar panels from old calculators and cordless phones to create portable power systems for emergency communications and electronic countermeasures. He promoted Penn Acres multi-fuel corn burners in Clinton, Michigan, and explained coal as a long-term survival fuel storage option. Koernke solicited Christmas donations and cards for his P.O. Box, encouraged listeners to purchase affordable handheld radios and tools from discount retailers, and provided weather and road safety updates for the morning commute.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, self-sufficiency, and critiques of government spending and propaganda. He analyzed Fortune magazine's coverage of preppers and survivalists, arguing the terms are interchangeable and that preparedness is logical and necessary. Koernke examined wasteful municipal spending in Chelsea and Dexter, Michigan, including unnecessary police facilities and architectural demolition. He provided practical advice on sourcing rechargeable batteries from discarded electronics and cordless phone systems, explaining how to repurpose cordless phones as walkie-talkies and base stations for communication. He criticized Hollywood's portrayal of radio operators and ham radio enthusiasts as villains in disaster scenarios, contrasting this with historical examples of amateur radio's effectiveness during natural disasters. Throughout, he emphasized the importance of self-reliance, mutual defense through militia organization, and distrust of centralized government agencies like FEMA.
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Mark Koernke discussed the uncertainty principle and its application to a rumored nuclear threat that was mentioned on Friday's broadcast, arguing that public disclosure may have deterred the planned attack. He extensively covered alternative communication and internet infrastructure, including using discarded cordless phones and baby monitors as FM transceivers to build local mesh networks, and converting them into micro FM broadcast stations. Koernke also analyzed the Iraq withdrawal as semantic rebranding rather than actual troop reduction, discussed the strategic positioning of 8,000 troops in Kuwait, and warned of Chinese acquisition of California agricultural land as part of a coordinated globalist plan to displace Mexican labor and undermine American economic interests.