"secession"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, state sovereignty, and the draft in response to caller questions, arguing that states retain the right to secede from the union as a matter of contract law and that citizens should refuse participation in any draft under the current illegitimate regime. He extensively covered veteran mistreatment throughout American history, linking pharmaceutical interventions (particularly Prozac) to veteran suicide rates and describing deliberate government strategies to isolate and demoralize returning soldiers. The show featured detailed practical instruction on camouflage techniques, tarps, and vehicle concealment using affordable materials, and concluded with a historical narrative about Samuel Whittemore, an 80-year-old militia fighter at Lexington in 1775, whom Koernke suggested was the original inspiration for Uncle Sam.
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Mark Koernke discussed Cinco de Ammo Day (May 5th) and urged listeners to purchase ammunition as a form of voting with their wallets. The show covered concerns about President Obama's legitimacy as a foreign exchange student, Senate Bill 909 hate speech legislation, Montana's House Bill 246 asserting state sovereignty over firearms manufactured within the state, and warnings about potential state secession movements being orchestrated by globalists to balkanize the United States. Callers and co-hosts discussed the David Oleson AR-15 case, the Texas militia training exercise, and scenarios involving Texas independence, Chinese military occupation, and NAFTA corridor expansion.
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Mark Koernke discussed Texas independence and its geopolitical implications, warning that if Texas voted to secede from the Union, it would face military retaliation from the federal government, invasion from Mexico, and potential intervention from external powers like China. He drew parallels to historical conflicts in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Korea, arguing that the federal government is deliberately isolating Texas through immigration policy and infrastructure projects to facilitate its eventual absorption. Koernke also addressed the symbolism of a new building in Austin that resembles an owl and Mordor's tower, connected to globalist agendas, and criticized the 2008 presidential election as a distraction from domestic threats. He emphasized the need for Americans to prepare, arm themselves, and recognize that foreign wars are distractions from internal betrayal by federal and globalist actors.