"helmets"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed militia preparedness, equipment procurement, and medical supplies on this Friday afternoon broadcast. The show covered practical topics including footwear (Belleville boots), helmets, ammunition storage, and medical supplies like antibiotics and disinfectants, with callers sharing deals on alcohol pads and other items. Koernke emphasized the importance of logistics, radio communications testing, and personal medical preparedness in anticipation of conflict, while also addressing the situation in Gaza as a precursor to potential domestic threats.
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Mark Koernke discussed tactical preparedness, camouflage techniques, and equipment procurement from Coleman's surplus, including backpack covers, body veils, helmets, and first aid kits. He emphasized the importance of communications infrastructure—CB radios, FRS radios, and gas masks—as essential tools for the coming conflict. The second hour focused on the FBI's vetting of National Guard members, which Koernke characterized as political purging. He called for armed resistance against federal overreach, framed as an American war of independence rather than civil war, and urged listeners to organize locally, maintain discipline, and prepare for imminent conflict with the federal government and what he described as communist infiltration of U.S. institutions.
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Mark Koernke discussed tactical preparedness for potential civil conflict, focusing on ammunition selection (ball vs. hollow point rounds), protective gear (helmets, body armor, elbow/knee pads), and psychological factors in armed confrontation. He analyzed the Kent State shooting, historical communist tactics in Russia and Ukraine, and warned against supporting police who enforce unconstitutional orders. Callers contributed perspectives on hunting experience as preparation and overcoming psychological barriers to self-defense. Koernke criticized the incoming Trump administration's cabinet selections, particularly Rick Perry as Secretary of Energy, and discussed the electoral college's actual legal mechanisms.