"oath keepers"
20 episodes tagged with this keyword
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The episode featured discussions on grand jury procedures and constitutional rights, followed by extensive coverage of a Bundy Ranch-type standoff developing in southern Oregon between miners of the Gallus Mining District and the BLM over mineral rights and land control. The host also covered a controversial police case involving a corrections officer who killed his wife, a shooting at a North Carolina community college, and a lengthy segment critiquing Nelson Mandela's legacy, including his role as head of a terrorist wing and communist ideology. Callers contributed perspectives on property rights, government overreach, and militia preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed an FBI leaked document on militia violent extremism symbols and phrases, analyzing how patriotic American imagery and constitutional references are being flagged as indicators of extremism. He covered the interconnected nature of recent anti-gun legislation efforts, including red flag laws, ATF reclassifications of semi-automatic rifles as machine guns, and NICS denial procedures designed to enable raids on gun owners. The show included extensive discussion of firearms maintenance, storage, and tactical preparedness, with emphasis on weapon accumulation and field operations doctrine.
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Mark Koernke discussed ammunition inventory at firearms retailers, analyzed organizational challenges within militia groups like Oath Keepers and Three Percenters, and addressed January 6th prosecutions and plea negotiations with indicted oath keepers. He emphasized the importance of operational security, exit strategies, and proper planning for civil unrest. The second hour focused extensively on weapons, ammunition, and tactical doctrine including grenade usage, improvised ordnance manufacturing, historical examples from World War I and II, and deception warfare tactics.
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Mark Koernke hosted the afternoon and evening editions of The Intelligence Report on May 26, 2021, covering weapons systems, body armor, preparedness, and political commentary. The afternoon show focused on the Chiappa CF-500 9mm AK-pattern rifle, body armor options from Centerfire Systems and Coleman's, and discussed ammunition pricing and wartime production capabilities. The evening show continued with detailed tactical advice on first contact firefighting, team dynamics, breathing techniques, and psychological preparation for combat, followed by discussion of Charles Dyer (July 4th Patriot) and his continued incarceration, and brief commentary on Oath Keepers.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness equipment including Turkish reversible ponchos and Italian BDU uniforms available through surplus suppliers, emphasizing their practical value for militia training and field operations. He analyzed the ATF's arrest of the AutoKeyCards.com owner for selling etched metal cards deemed machine gun conversion devices, warning listeners about federal overreach and advising against contacting authorities without legal counsel. Koernke covered the arrest of retired Army Sergeant Kenneth Harrelson for attending the January 6th Capitol protest, detailing how federal agents seized family assets and disrupted the family's livelihood, and he drew parallels to historical federal intimidation of juries in cases like the Branch Davidian siege, arguing that armed resistance is preferable to legal prosecution.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, weapons systems, and tactical communications on Weapons Wednesday, February 24, 2021. He covered CB radio networks as primary communication infrastructure, emphasized avoiding cell phones due to tracking capabilities (citing the Oath Keepers indictments), and provided detailed guidance on shotgun selection, ammunition types, and pistol choices for different tactical scenarios. He also discussed black powder conversions, magazine sourcing, and the importance of accuracy over volume fire in combat situations.
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Mark Koernke discussed the precautionary principle from UNESCO, the North American Union agenda, Quebec secession movements, and connections between globalist organizations and controlled opposition groups like the Oath Keepers. He analyzed a long article detailing how the Quebec separation movement was orchestrated by communist elements and the Power Corporation of Canada, and how similar regional government structures are being implemented across North America. The second hour covered Operation Binary Blackout (a FEMA exercise to simulate power and water outages), the FBI raid on Allure Medical for offering intravenous vitamin C therapy for COVID-19, and practical quartermaster advice on ammunition, surplus equipment, and night vision procurement.
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Nancy Cornke hosted the second hour of the Intelligence Report on October 14, 2010, focusing primarily on the case of Baby Cheyenne, a newborn allegedly removed from her parents by New Hampshire Child Protective Services and placed in foster care where she was reportedly sexually abused. Callers and hosts discussed evidence of abuse, questioned the decision to return the child to the same foster family, and provided contact information for officials including Judge Susan W. Ashley, Sheriff Scott Hilliard, and CPS workers. The episode included discussion of a militia training exercise scheduled for October 23rd near Cleveland, Texas, and broader concerns about government overreach and child protective services failures. By the end of the hour, callers reported that the child had been returned to her parents following public pressure from phone calls.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed a child custody case in New Hampshire where a baby was returned to parents after a coordinated public pressure campaign involving phone calls to Child Protective Services. The hosts covered multiple cases of alleged government overreach in child protective services, including those of Kristi Chivokowski, Amy Sharron, and Gayle Lynn LaMaster. They emphasized the importance of citizen activism, discussed militia training exercises scheduled for October 23rd near Cleveland, and reviewed night vision equipment specifications and pricing. The broadcast included calls from listeners sharing similar experiences with CPS and discussing preparedness and constitutional rights.
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Mark Koernke discussed a deeply disturbing case involving a seven-day-old infant in New Hampshire who was taken into state custody and allegedly sexually abused while in the care of Child Protective Services and hospital staff. The parents had been separated from their newborn daughter 16 hours after birth, and during a supervised visitation, the mother discovered severe vaginal bleeding and signs of sexual assault on the child. Koernke characterized the incident as part of an organized occult conspiracy involving CPS, hospital personnel, and law enforcement, claiming it was a ritualistic sacrifice operation timed for October. He called for legal action, public exposure, hospital surveillance footage retrieval, and identification of all personnel involved, while expressing escalating rhetoric about confronting what he described as a network of child-abusing government operatives.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple topics including the Knob Creek shooting event, militia preparedness, and a controversial child custody case involving an Oath Keepers member in New Hampshire where CPS took an infant. He analyzed political dynamics around potential VP changes, criticized federal overreach and CPS practices, warned about infiltration within patriot organizations and secret societies, discussed CFR meetings on UN gun bans, and took a caller's complaint about repeated dog seizures by authorities.
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Mark Koernke discussed a Time magazine article by Barton Gelman attacking militia groups, criticizing its yellow journalism and false connections between constitutional patriots and extremists. He covered FBI and ATF misconduct, including cheating on ethics exams in the Detroit office and the agency's failure to win cases in three years. Callers reported on Child Protective Services seizing a newborn from an Oath Keeper in New Hampshire and discussed tactics for resisting unconstitutional government overreach, including refusing to cooperate with social workers without proper warrants and the importance of grand jury investigations into CPS abuses.
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Mark Koernke discussed alleged coordinated government operations against militia and patriot groups, focusing on a Time Magazine article by editor Richard Stengel about recent law enforcement actions. Koernke claimed these actions were planned six months in advance and part of a broader pattern of persecution orchestrated by the ADL, Mossad, and federal agencies. He analyzed media coverage of incidents involving Oath Keepers and other groups, urged listeners to identify and document journalists and federal agents involved, and called for legal and financial countermeasures against government officials. The show included caller discussions about property seizures, bank fraud, and preparedness, with Koernke advocating for armed resistance and non-violent disruption of Time Magazine sales.
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Mark Koernke discussed foreclosure fraud and property seizure in Michigan, particularly in Flint where the mayor proposed using the National Guard to evict homeowners. He criticized electronic notarization and mortgage fraud schemes, explaining how banks foreclose on properties even when owners have perfect payment records. The show featured discussion of propaganda tactics in mainstream media, the Sergeant Dyer case involving false weapons charges, and banking fraud including overdraft fee scams. In the second hour, Mark and guest Tom Berryhill discussed plans to create modular micro-FM broadcasting systems for local communities, seeking listener input on pricing and features for a plug-and-play radio station package.
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Mark Koernke discussed the erosion of constitutional governance and preparedness in America. He analyzed the 2010 primary election results, noting that 9-10% of incumbent senators had been voted out by their own parties, signaling a shift in political momentum. Koernke and co-host Don examined the pattern of no-knock search warrant abuses from the 1970s, drawing parallels to contemporary law enforcement overreach, and emphasized the importance of armed self-defense and community vigilance. The show covered the Alaska senatorial race, the renaming of military combat units to obscure their function, and the declining public interest in presidential appearances. Koernke taught listeners a technique for analyzing facial expressions and body language in political videos to detect fear or deception.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, analyzing BP's use of dispersants and suggesting the company was manipulating damage assessments. He covered border security issues, militia training exercises across multiple states, and promoted a multiband festival in Wellington, Ohio (July 2-4, 2010). Koernke addressed Campaign for Liberty's legal troubles under a gag order, comparing the coordinated attacks on patriot organizations including Oath Keepers and Tea Party groups. He also discussed a Russian spy ring arrest as a distraction from domestic issues, and took calls from listeners including one descendant of Declaration of Independence signer Thomas Lynch Jr.
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Mark Koernke discussed military personnel purges under the Obama administration, specifically the targeting of senior NCOs with 16+ years of service for denial of pension benefits. He compared this to Jimmy Carter's 1977 purge of battlefield-commissioned Vietnam officers and warned that experienced American military personnel were being systematically removed to make way for foreign troops and politically reliable forces. The show also featured an extended caller segment about judicial corruption in Minnesota, where a woman named Gail Lynn LaMasters faced a rigged divorce proceeding involving asset forfeiture, attorney removal, and alleged document forgery, with connections to her candidacy for lieutenant governor. Additional topics included environmental concerns about oil spill fumes in Louisiana, red tide cycles in the Gulf, and BP accountability.
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Mark Koernke discussed the April 2009 tea parties held across the country, praising their success despite media downplaying. He delivered an extended satirical commentary on the White House's response to a tea box left on the lawn, describing a malfunctioning Israeli-made robot with Chinese components and a Canadian arm. Caller Dave from Northern California recited an oath affirming constitutional principles and 9/11 truth, leading to discussion of the Mexico summit with Chinese officials, the Freedom Tower name change due to Chinese tenants, and concerns about the southern border as a strategic vulnerability. The show concluded with extensive discussion of 9/11 response failures, particularly regarding World Trade Center 7 and firefighter protocols, with callers and the host questioning command decisions and lack of proper firefighting procedures.
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Mark Koernke discussed Patriots Day (April 19th) and its historical significance as the start of the American Revolution in 1775, contrasting it with the commonly cited July 4th, 1776. He announced upcoming militia training exercises across Michigan, including the 11th Regimental Combat Team's three-day exercise and the 23rd Regimental Combat Team's 50-caliber rifle qualifications at Camp Nagga Hitchem. Koernke emphasized the importance of the Oath Keepers gathering at Lexington Green on April 19th and criticized the Obama administration as illegitimate. He and caller Don discussed the historical context of the American Revolution, including the availability of firearms, the role of blacksmiths and foundries, and the infrastructure of colonial militia. The show featured extensive discussion of preparedness, the distinction between Patriots and Tories, and warnings about government overreach.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, constitutional rights, and historical parallels to the American Revolution on April 17, 2009. The show covered upcoming Oath Keepers gatherings on Patriot's Day (April 19), network expansion plans for Liberty Tree Radio, and personal reflections on drug culture and government deception from the 1960s-70s. Koernke drew connections between historical hijackings, 9/11 inconsistencies, and current political threats, then shifted to medical and tactical training segments covering IED response procedures and cardiac medications including isoproterenol, amrinone, and digitalis.