"phyllis schlafly"
7 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke opened the November 4, 2011 morning broadcast with commentary on Friday traffic safety, emphasizing defensive driving and awareness of hazards like ice patches and school buses. He discussed ammunition availability through MainMilitary.com and Preview Partisan imports, covering obsolete calibers like 8mm Lebel, 7.5 French, and 300 Savage. Koernke promoted Turkish-manufactured firearms including the MKA 1919 semi-auto shotgun and Saiga AK rifles from CenterFireSystems.com. He encouraged listeners to participate in weekly ammunition purchases (Cinco de Ammo Day) and donate to the Micro Effect network for a satellite system drawing. A caller discussed chemtrails, 300 Win Mag rifles, and Czech CZ firearms before the segment transitioned to Phyllis Schlafly's report on Ronald Reagan's handwritten speech note cards discovered at the Reagan Library.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's recent media appearance, criticizing mainstream media manipulation and the use of earpieces and teleprompters to control on-air personalities. He analyzed media tactics used to suppress Ron Paul's message, including camera angle manipulation and editorial control. Koernke then shifted to discussing education costs and student debt, sharing personal anecdotes about paying for college through work and coin collecting while criticizing affirmative action and homosexual favoritism in university hiring. The episode concluded with Phyllis Schlafly discussing welfare state spending, single motherhood, and its effects on family structure and national debt.
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Mark Koernke opened the show with weather and safety observations about foggy, damp conditions and harvest season traffic hazards in the Midwest. He discussed the ongoing occupation of America and referenced the fourth year of what he characterized as socialist and Soviet socialist occupation. The episode included a segment from the Phyllis Schlafly Report addressing feminism, motherhood, workforce participation, and family policy, with Schlafly arguing that most mothers prefer part-time work and that the gender gap reflects natural maternal preferences rather than discrimination.
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Mark Koernke discussed the dangers of the United Nations and its attempts to impose treaties that violate American sovereignty, followed by commentary on the Occupy Boston protests and police response. He criticized the lack of American patriotic symbols at protests, compared modern protest tactics to Korean demonstrations, and discussed how communist infiltrators manipulate protest movements. Koernke also addressed the EU's overreach in regulating children's activities, connected current events to historical monarchical control patterns, and took a caller from Houston who attended Occupy Houston and observed communist agitators. The episode concluded with Phyllis Schlafly's segment on UN dangers and its failure to maintain world peace.
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Mark Koernke opened the show with extensive historical commentary on Native American tribes in the Great Lakes region, discussing tribal warfare, torture practices, and settlement patterns in Michigan. He contrasted Hollywood depictions of Native Americans with historical accounts from Jesuit records, noting inaccuracies in films like 'Dances with Wolves' and 'A Man Called Horse.' The second segment featured commentary on Hank Williams Jr.'s controversial Obama-Hitler comparison and ESPN's response, with Koernke arguing the analogy was misguided but defending free speech. He then drew parallels between Obama and Richard Nixon's unauthorized military actions, arguing Obama's Libya invasion without congressional approval warranted similar criticism to Nixon's Cambodia invasion. The show included advertisements for Life Change T tea and freeze-dried food products, and a segment from Phyllis Schlafly on the Violence Against Women Act.
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Mark Koernke discussed the beating death of Kelly Thomas, a 37-year-old homeless man in Fullerton, California, who was beaten by police officers and subsequently died. Koernke analyzed video evidence of the incident, criticized the systemic nature of police brutality across multiple states, and argued that such training and tactics originate from federal and state-level directives rather than individual officer decisions. He also addressed the suppression of evidence related to the case and called for accountability. The episode concluded with a segment from Phyllis Schlafly's Report on the National Day of Prayer and constitutional religious freedom.
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The episode opened with a Phyllis Schlafly Report segment critiquing the Violence Against Women Act as feminist-driven legislation that discriminates against men and wastes taxpayer money. The show then transitioned to Mark Koernke's Intelligence Report, which aired the patriotic poem 'Visitor From the Past' about constitutional freedoms and government overreach. The episode included promotional content for Vitamer toothpaste and mouthwash, and featured fragmented discussion segments with unclear audio quality.