"lend-lease"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and self-sufficiency in response to a severe wind event that swept across the country on November 9, 2011. He detailed DIY construction techniques for building affordable Quonset hut structures using PVC pipe and vinyl siding, emphasizing over-engineering and scavenging free materials. The show addressed emergency preparedness, dismissed doomsday panic as counterproductive, and took a caller (John) discussing geopolitical concerns about U.S. trade relationships, particularly regarding WASP aircraft engines supplied to Russia during World War II that were subsequently sold to Japan.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Don discussed militia training exercises in Texas, alternative communications infrastructure independent of the internet, and extensive historical analysis of World War II Allied relationships. The show covered a Texas Militia training event scheduled for November 20th near Cleveland, Texas, featuring live-fire and force-on-force combat simulations. Koernke and Don analyzed propaganda films like 'Victory at Sea' and 'Why We Fight,' arguing they obscured socialist ideology and misrepresented Soviet intentions. The hosts presented claims about American aircraft engines sent to Russia via Lend-Lease being diverted to Japan through the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, and discussed alleged American POWs held on Wrangel Island by the Soviet Union after World War II.
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Mark Koernke discussed the post-World War II period (1945-1950) and how American history was deliberately obscured during this critical five-year window. He covered Soviet expansion into Eastern Europe, the betrayal of Poland and Eastern European allies, the role of the Council on Foreign Relations in orchestrating global policy, and the suppression of American veterans and patriot groups who opposed UN sovereignty and communist advancement. Koernke also addressed the Liberty Dollar seizure and Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, arguing that the government targeted the Liberty Dollar coins because they represented sound currency backed by precious metals—a direct threat to the Federal Reserve's fiat system. He called for grassroots production and distribution of Ron Paul commemorative coins in copper, silver, and gold as a form of political and economic resistance.