"laredo texas"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Nancy Corney hosted the second hour of the Intelligence Report, focusing heavily on border security and illegal immigration. She discussed the infiltration of ranches in Laredo, Texas by the Zetas drug cartel, criticized the federal government's border policies and funding to Mexico, and highlighted the success of the Minutemen in reducing border crossings by 98%. The show featured a caller from Arizona (Slinger) coordinating supply donations for volunteers stationed at the border, discussed prisoner rights and prison conditions in Michigan, and included commentary on economic collapse, currency devaluation, and calls to action for listeners to contact Congress regarding border security.
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Mark Koernke discussed the escalating border crisis, particularly the Zeta cartel's takeover of ranches in Laredo, Texas, and the federal government's failure to secure the southern border. He criticized President Obama's immigration policies and refusal to release his birth certificate, arguing that border security is a federal responsibility that should not fall to states like Texas and Arizona. Koernke emphasized the importance of militia volunteers going to Arizona to support understaffed Border Patrol agents facing drug cartels with superior firepower, and he promoted ham radio networks (Possum Net and Liberty Net) as alternatives to mainstream media. The show also included technical difficulties from recent storms, caller interactions about package delivery and border operations, and discussions of suspicious activity near Fort Huachuca and UFO sightings in Arizona.
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Mark Koernke discussed a reported standoff between an armed cartel force and U.S. Border Patrol on ranches near Laredo, Texas, involving drug trafficking and undocumented aliens. He emphasized the importance of coordinated intelligence reporting using satellite imagery, mapping data, and radio monitoring to track such incidents. Koernke stressed the need for standardized situational reports (sitreps) with specific geographic data and advocated for patriots to use available technology—RC aircraft, cell phone cameras, and internet-accessible surveillance feeds—to conduct independent surveillance and intelligence gathering. He criticized casual internet posting practices and called for more disciplined, tactical communication protocols among his audience.