"halliburton"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke and Nancy discussed border security efforts in Arizona, with callers praising militia initiatives to stop drug and weapons trafficking through historic smuggling corridors. The show covered the history of U.S. taxation, tracing how the income tax replaced alcohol taxes in 1913 and how tariffs protect domestic manufacturing, contrasting Korea's 33% import tariffs with America's approach. The second hour focused on fundraising for Liberty Tree Radio's annual server costs ($2,000/year) and promoted the Night Vision instructional video series (three DVDs for $35), which took two years to produce and covers classroom instruction and field techniques including muzzle flash identification. The final segment addressed the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, detailing how BP skipped 13 safety procedures during shutdown, leading to the disaster, and discussing corporate liability evasion and environmental damage.
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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 and co-host Don discussed deer hunting season opening in Michigan, economic damage from military spending and contractor overpricing (particularly Halliburton), illegal immigration's impact on wages and employment, and the role of music and sound frequencies in social control and conditioning. The second half featured caller James from New Jersey discussing how music industry playlists are centrally controlled via satellite feeds, the suppression of songs with anti-establishment messages (such as The Kinks' '20th Century Man' and Tom Petty's 'Last DJ'), and how harmonics and frequencies in music are used to influence population behavior—drawing parallels to CIA drug programs and the need for independent broadcasting to discuss these topics.