"reconstruction"
7 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the 14th Amendment as unlawful acts that destroyed constitutional governance and replaced common law with civil law controlled by men in power. He read extensively from historical documents including Jeremiah Black's 1860 Attorney General opinion on presidential war powers, analyzed Abraham Lincoln's unconstitutional suspension of habeas corpus and imposition of martial law, and examined the role of Judah P. Benjamin as a Rothschild agent who allegedly influenced Confederate strategy. The show covered ammunition availability, reloading techniques, medical preparedness items, and plans for developing alternative ammunition solutions. Callers contributed information on over-the-counter medications, survival supplies, and ammunition sourcing.
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The host discussed COVID-19 as a potential fraud and bioweapon, citing doctors who claim the virus was never properly isolated. He covered the 14th Amendment as unconstitutional and discussed Lincoln's role in centralizing federal power. The show included extensive quartermaster segments featuring ammunition and tactical gear pricing from various suppliers, discussions of thermal evasion techniques, and commentary on government overreach, corporate consolidation, and cultural Marxism.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 14th Amendment's illegal ratification and its role in centralizing federal power, the Civil War as a communist revolution, reconstruction as cultural genocide, and contemporary threats to constitutional rights including gun control legislation in Oregon. He analyzed historical documents showing the 14th Amendment was never properly ratified and used to justify federal overreach. The show included extensive discussion of preparedness, ammunition and firearm availability, and warnings about government threats to liberty.
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Mark Koernke discussed the erosion of common law and natural rights in America, tracing the shift from law based on God and nature to judge-made law divorced from morality. He analyzed the January 6th Capitol incident, presenting witness accounts suggesting government involvement and questioning official narratives. The show covered nursing home deaths under Governor Cuomo, critical race theory and identity politics as tools of control, the Civil War as a planned destruction of the South, and the 14th Amendment as illegitimate and foundational to federal overreach. Koernke warned of an impending government-sponsored bombing attack and called for local militia action to restore constitutional governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed the federal government's alleged unconstitutional actions against Arizona, arguing that appealing to the United Nations constitutes treason against the states. He extensively analyzed the American Civil War, contending that European bankers and Wall Street manipulated both North and South to weaken American sovereignty, and that slavery was not the primary cause but rather a tool for economic control. Koernke covered the post-Civil War Reconstruction period, the westward migration caused by northern banker foreclosures, and historical parallels between southern plantation exploitation and northern industrial labor abuses including the forced importation of Welsh and Irish miners. He fielded caller questions about constitutional law, admiralty court symbolism, and state sovereignty.
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Mark Koernke discussed water independence and well construction as critical preparedness skills, emphasizing how to locate, drive, and maintain shallow wells using dowsing and hand tools. He addressed Michigan's water resources and the threat of government control over water rights, advocating for migration to the Great Lakes region as a strategic stronghold. The show covered post-conflict reconstruction, self-sufficiency through salvaged and improvised tools, and the importance of community mutual aid. Koernke also critiqued media comparisons between the Hutaree militia and the Black Panthers, distinguishing between peaceful militia activity and violent intimidation at polling places.
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Mark Koernke and Michael Messer covered veterinary first aid instruction on anaerobic infections, pulmonary infarction, and treatment of mouth, nose, and puncture wounds in dogs. Caller George discussed historical revisionism regarding the Civil War, arguing that northern bankers orchestrated the conflict to seize southern land and resources, that slavery was economically unviable, and that the South's eventual recovery resulted from carpetbagger failure. The hosts and caller explored tariffs, hemp exports, Irish immigration, Liberia's founding, and the triangle trade. The episode concluded with political commentary on the 2008 presidential race, criticizing both Barack Obama and John McCain as inadequate candidates.