"knob creek resolution"
8 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed militia preparedness, equipment supply systems (the 5-10 program), and communications infrastructure on July 2, 2024. He covered practical topics including helmet storage, tactical gear organization in five-gallon buckets, battery packs for radios, and the importance of familiarity with equipment like Baofeng radios. The show included extensive commentary on election integrity concerns, political signaling through clothing colors, and historical context of the militia movement in the 1990s, particularly the Oklahoma City bombing aftermath and the Knob Creek Resolution. Callers raised issues about drug trafficking (nitazene), homelessness, and media manipulation regarding crime reporting.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia organizing activities, including multi-state war councils in the Upper Peninsula and upcoming meetings at Knob Creek in Kentucky to formalize a second resolution. He detailed plans for building simple transceivers for non-middleman communications using standard frequencies, emphasizing the KISS principle. Koernke warned of alleged bomb factories operated by Israeli Mossad, ATF, and FBI, urging listeners to conduct surveillance using satellite imagery from realty sites. He provided detailed preparedness guidance on gas masks, chemical suits, and radiological defense, referencing the Oklahoma City bombing as a false-flag operation. The second hour featured Machine Gun Randy discussing his terminal liver cancer diagnosis, upcoming chemotherapy, and his views on tobacco and opioid industries as serial killers. Randy also discussed COVID vaccines and mask mandates being lifted in southern states.
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Mark Koernke and Mike Nasser discussed the strength and capability of militia forces in America, using historical and contemporary examples to argue that irregular forces can effectively resist tyranny through discipline, organization, and spirit rather than technology alone. They examined case studies including the 2006 Hezbollah-Israel conflict, the 1996 Freeman siege in Montana, and the Eritrean-Ethiopian war to demonstrate how lightly-armed forces have defeated technologically superior militaries. Koernke emphasized the militia's deep experience across all U.S. military service branches, the importance of decentralized organization, and the Knob Creek Resolution—a coordinated 1996 militia response that prevented federal escalation at the Freeman standoff. Caller John from Florida asked about technological asymmetry and constitutional militia organization, leading to extended discussion of small-arms effectiveness against helicopters in Iraq and the psychological and organizational factors that determine military outcomes.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, government overreach, and the threat of socialism and martial law in America. He emphasized the importance of the Second Amendment and criticized federal authority, referencing the Knob Creek Resolution from the Freeman Standoff era. Koernke argued that Americans must resist tyranny through armed preparedness and mental fortitude, contrasted Soviet oppression with American liberty, and endorsed Ron Paul as the only viable presidential candidate. He called for listeners to arm themselves and stand united against what he characterized as a globalist New World Order agenda.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional resistance to federal overreach, drawing extensively on Alexander Solzhenitsyn's warnings about police states and comparing American socialism to Soviet oppression. He referenced the Knob Creek Resolution and historical documents like the Fairfax and Sufffolk Resolves as precedents for resistance. The second half featured Mike from Arizona providing detailed field preparedness instruction on water purification using iodine tablets, field sanitation, ammunition storage in bandoliers, and weapon maintenance including phosphate finishes. Callers asked about .223 bandolier construction and firearm preservation techniques.
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Mark Koernke discussed a successful patriot concert held in New Hampshire over the weekend, highlighting the integrity and trustworthiness of patriot community members as demonstrated by an unguarded donation bucket that remained untouched throughout the event. He contrasted this with typical behavior at other public gatherings and reflected on his decades of experience at patriot meetings across all 48 states. Koernke then shifted to constitutional topics, critiquing the executive branch's overreach in military deployments and emphasizing Congress's constitutional duty to declare war. He discussed letters of mark and reprisal as historical mechanisms for limiting governmental power through specific language and narrow authority. The show featured caller contributions, including a lengthy discussion with a caller named Alfie about preparedness, the Knob Creek Resolution, and the strategic importance of maintaining local cadres rather than concentrating forces in single locations like New Hampshire. Koernke also provided updates on his book series publication progress and upcoming video releases featuring militia units.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Knob Creek Resolution of 1996, a historical document signed by militia representatives during the Freeman standoff in Montana that declared federal overreach unconstitutional and warned of potential armed response to unlawful federal actions. He covered upcoming militia exercises in Illinois and Connecticut, promoted his Battle for the Republic book series and related video projects, explained litigation strategies against NAFTA superhighway sponsors using breach-of-contract arguments based on the Constitution, and encouraged listeners to boycott corporations supporting border destruction while filing individual legal actions rather than class-action suits.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 1996 Knob Creek Resolution, a landmark agreement signed by 20 militia leaders from across the country in response to federal overreach following Waco and Oklahoma City. Guest Drew Rainier, a signer of the resolution, described how militia commanders came together, debated intensely, and unanimously agreed to a "no more Waco's" stance, establishing that any future federal attacks on militia groups would be met with organized resistance. The show covered the history of militia organizing, the effectiveness of the Knob Creek declaration in deterring federal action, and connected these themes to contemporary issues including the Virginia Tech shooting, gun control laws, and the militarization of civilian police under Homeland Security.