"rpk"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the shooting incident at the Kansas City Super Bowl parade on February 14, 2024, expressing skepticism about official narratives and emphasizing that civilians, not police, stopped the shooter. He covered weapons systems including AK drums, RPK barrels, belt-fed options, and equipment from suppliers like Atlantic Firearms and Sarco Inc. The show included extensive discussion of militia organization, preparedness logistics, and night vision equipment training. Koernke also addressed the 2024 presidential race, noting signs that Democrats may be distancing from Biden due to mental fitness concerns, and critiqued U.S. foreign aid to Israel and Ukraine as wasteful government spending that benefits politicians rather than citizens.
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Mark Koernke discussed weapons systems and preparedness on Weapons Wednesday, focusing extensively on camouflage selection for temperate environments, weapon painting techniques, and magazine/ammunition carrying systems. He emphasized that desert camouflage is inappropriate for most U.S. operations and explained proper ammunition safety protocols. The second half of the show shifted to food security and self-sufficiency, with caller Courtney advocating for immediate home gardening and food production as resistance to government control. Callers discussed local food production, canning techniques, fuel security concerns, and militia organization at the grassroots level.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Veterans Disarmament Bill and criticized the NRA leadership for betraying veterans by allowing the legislation to advance without informing members. He covered the history of rifle designs, particularly the AR-15, AR-180, and Stoner rifle, explaining why the AR-180 was superior but politically sidelined. Koernke promoted HK 91/G3 magazines at $2 each and his book 'Battle for the Republic: The Winter War' for $25, providing mailing instructions. He fielded caller questions about magazine compatibility, rifle variants (RPK vs FPK), ammunition storage, and emergency cartridge substitution. A caller named Rob critiqued the movement's over-emphasis on firearms, arguing that sanitation and waste disposal were more critical during Hurricane Rita, which Koernke acknowledged as valid preparedness concerns.