"coyotes"
13 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness topics including heirloom seed preservation using aquarium containers, wild predator management (wild dogs, coyotes, bears), hunting and food procurement strategies, archery and crossbow use, snare traps, and Michigan's wildlife populations. He addressed economic issues including gas price manipulation, welfare systems, and communist policies, while emphasizing self-sufficiency, proper ammunition management, and tactical awareness in potential conflict scenarios.
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Mark Koernke and Nancy discussed food preservation and storage techniques, including fermenting cabbage, canning and freezing pumpkin, and making syrups and preserves. They covered pest control methods for protecting stored crops and garden produce from mice, deer, coyotes, and other wildlife, including the use of hardware cloth, metal screening, and various deterrents. The conversation also included anecdotes about wildlife encounters on their property, including bears that escaped from a local resident's collection and the challenges of protecting food stores from predators.
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Mark Koernke discussed the border crisis and illegal immigration, alleging that NGOs and federal agencies were orchestrating the movement of Central American migrants into the United States using government buses and coordinated logistics. He criticized the Department of Immigration, law enforcement in black uniforms, and what he characterized as communist infiltration of government institutions. Koernke also addressed the Bundy Ranch standoff, foreign land ownership in America, and called for armed resistance against what he described as an invasion and government tyranny. A caller contributed details about disease transmission and the financial mechanisms funding migration northward.
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Mark Koernke and Joe McNeil discussed Colorado anti-gun activists and their surveillance tactics during recall campaigns, with callers sharing information about surplus equipment deals and wildlife observations. The hosts spent considerable time analyzing President Obama's racial identity and media coverage, discussing Syria war propaganda, Christmas sales, and making comparisons to historical figures like Rasputin. Topics included preparedness supplies like MREs, microphone equipment from All Electronics, and broader commentary on government incompetence and cultural decline.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Fast and Furious gun trafficking scandal, arguing that Attorney General Eric Holder and the Obama administration knowingly orchestrated the operation to smuggle weapons to Mexico as part of a broader political strategy to blame American gun owners and justify stricter gun control. He criticized Democratic hypocrisy for not protesting the operation and compared it to past presidential abuses. The show also covered a black bear attack in Pennsylvania, wildlife management issues, and caller discussions about government overreach, preparedness, and the reintroduction of predators like coyotes and wolves as part of socialist population control strategies.
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Mark Koernke discussed predator management and wildlife control in the second hour of the show, focusing on feral dog packs that devastated Michigan in the 1980s-1990s, feral pig infestations across Michigan counties, and coyote problems in Texas. He provided detailed techniques for deterring predators using human and dog hair, homemade noise-makers from recycled cans, and discussed hunting and preparing various game animals including woodchuck, rabbit, snake, and squirrel. Callers shared experiences with animal control issues and predator encounters, and Koernke emphasized the importance of self-sufficiency and preparedness regarding wildlife threats.
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Mark Koernke discussed predator management, particularly coyotes and wolves in Michigan, arguing that eco-activists prioritize animal protection over human safety and livelihood. He analyzed a televised interfaith dialogue about Christianity and Islam, referencing Albert Pike's alleged letter to Mazzini as evidence of a planned conflict between Muslims, Zionists, and Christians spanning over 150 years. Koernke criticized the public education system, environmental regulations, and eco-activism as tools of control, and fielded caller George's concerns about EPA obstruction of firefighting and habitat protection policies that endanger human lives.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, wildlife threats, and self-defense on July 16, 2010. The episode covered expanding predator populations in Michigan including coyotes, wolves, and wild pigs, with detailed analysis of animal behavior and survival tactics. Koernke addressed handgun selection for self-defense, recommending full-size weapons over smaller alternatives, and referenced James Wesley Rawls's article on pistol calibers. He also discussed militia training camps across Michigan, the need for computer RAM donations, and various wildlife encounters including a California coyote attack on a child.
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Mark Koernke discussed self-sufficiency and survival skills, focusing heavily on trapping, fishing, and hunting as practical preparedness methods. He interviewed a guest (referred to as Buckshot) who has 34 years of trapping experience and is promoting a book on trapping techniques and survival knowledge. The conversation covered wildlife management, predator control, urban wildlife (raccoons, coyotes), fishing methods, gardening, and the importance of teaching children outdoor skills. Callers contributed discussions on bear attacks, wildlife management philosophy, snare construction, and a Texas militia training exercise scheduled for June 19th.
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Mark Koernke and guests discussed survival preparedness, wildlife threats, and self-sufficiency skills. Bruce Emming, a trapping expert with 30 years of experience, presented snaring techniques for food procurement and predator control, emphasizing the importance of learning these skills through instructional DVDs covering survival snaring, advanced snaring, and ultimate trapping methods. The show addressed escalating threats from coyotes and feral dogs in populated areas, including documented sightings in Ohio and Kentucky, and discussed how domestic animals and humans could become targets as animal populations grow unchecked. Callers and hosts explored cache systems, evacuation preparedness, and creative defensive technologies using repurposed household items like smoke alarms as tripwire alerts.
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Mark Koernke and guest Bruce Hemings discussed food self-sufficiency and survival skills on Weapons Wednesday, October 8, 2008. The episode focused on food procurement through trapping and snaring as practical solutions for long-term preparedness, with Hemings sharing 40 years of wilderness survival expertise and promoting his snare kits and instructional DVDs. The hosts criticized the 2008 financial bailout and election process, warned about potential food supply disruptions and foreign acquisition of American agricultural resources, and discussed wildlife management including deer overpopulation in Michigan subdivisions, feral hogs in Texas, and the threat posed by wolves and coyotes. The episode emphasized learning traditional skills like trapping as essential preparation for economic and social instability.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Veterans Disarmament Act and warned veterans about VA psychiatric evaluation programs that could result in firearm confiscation through the National Instant Criminal Background Check System. He promoted affordable gas masks from Maine Military Supply as preparedness items. The bulk of the episode focused on predator management, particularly wolves and coyotes being introduced into Michigan and other states as part of a larger agenda to compress the American population into cities through environmental control and economic pressure. Callers Kay, George, and Jeff contributed perspectives on wolves, alligators, wild boars, and coyotes, with Mark arguing that predators must be actively managed by humans and that the introduction of aggressive predator populations serves a deliberate social engineering purpose to restrict rural populations and eliminate hunting rights.
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Mark Koernke's afternoon show focused on preparedness and self-sufficiency, covering ammunition and firearms availability, water purification systems, freeze-dried food storage and rotation, food preservation techniques including salting and smoking meat, and animal husbandry. The hosts discussed coyote predation in their area, promoted Swiss military boots and Swedish summer uniforms available through their organization, and emphasized the urgent need for listeners to stockpile supplies including food, water, ammunition, and fuel before civil unrest occurs.