"felon in possession"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple topics including alleged Israeli involvement in Middle Eastern conflicts, Michigan political corruption, currency and precious metals as alternative wealth storage, food preservation and canning systems, and criticized Trump's recent proposals regarding Greenland, Canada, and Panama as a continuation of NAFTA/GATT globalist agendas. He also covered a Third Circuit Court ruling on Second Amendment rights for non-violent felons and Michigan gun buyback legislation.
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Mark Koernke discussed a shooting incident in North Carolina involving a single armed individual who engaged a large tactical force, resulting in multiple casualties among law enforcement. He analyzed the tactical implications, arguing that one motivated defender with basic weapons defeated a superior force equipped with body armor and automatic weapons, demonstrating the vulnerability of government assault teams. The episode also covered topics including May Day communist activities, college campus protests, alleged Israeli involvement in domestic unrest, food production and gardening for self-sufficiency, NBC decontamination equipment, CB radio communications, and criticism of government agencies, the federal reserve, and foreign aid to Ukraine and Israel.
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Mark Koernke hosted a Friday afternoon and evening broadcast on March 15, 2024, covering ammunition purchasing recommendations (Cinco de Ammo Day), firearm maintenance and reloading practices, court system corruption and the Michigan school shooting case, Second Amendment legal developments, and upcoming militia training exercises. The show included extensive discussion of revolver maintenance, ammunition sourcing from various dealers, the illegitimacy of admiralty courts, and preparation for anticipated civil conflict in 2024.
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Mark Koernke discussed a federal court ruling striking down the felon-in-possession firearms ban under the Second Amendment, analyzing the judge's reasoning that the 1938 law lacks historical precedent required by the Bruin standard. He extensively critiqued the admiralty court system as illegitimate, arguing it replaced constitutional common law courts in 1938 through the Buck Act and War Powers Act. Koernke covered property room theft by law enforcement, recidivism as a deliberate system feature, and the Supreme Court's gatekeeping process. He urged listeners to prepare for conflict by acquiring gas masks, body armor, and organizing militia units with standardized equipment and logistics, warning that federal raids on FFLs and gun owners were imminent.