"library censorship"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed library censorship and book suppression, explaining how restricted collections and the Dewey Decimal System are used to control access to information, particularly books like 'None Dare Call It Conspiracy.' He criticized librarians as 'book burners' and detailed his experience at the University of Michigan attempting to donate copies of restricted books. The show covered election fraud concerns, voter registration manipulation in Michigan, and Colin Powell's recent statements about an impending international crisis in January, which Koernke characterized as preparatory propaganda for a fabricated false-flag event. He urged listeners to prepare with food, water, ammunition, and gas masks, and called for militia organization and resistance to what he described as an incoming police state expansion.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Becker discussed the controlled media's role in promoting wars and the neoconservative agenda, contrasting the post-9/11 patriotism surge with pre-9/11 vilification of constitutional patriots. They analyzed the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, questioning who benefited and the CIA's involvement in regional politics. The hosts emphasized alternative information distribution methods—from cassettes to the internet—as tools to preserve knowledge suppressed by centralized library systems and mainstream media. They also addressed geothermal activity and natural climate cycles, critiquing the global warming narrative, and promoted Ron Paul's presidential campaign as the authentic constitutional alternative to establishment candidates.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Don Betcher interviewed author John Stormer about his seminal book 'None Dare Call It Treason,' originally published in February 1964, which documented communist infiltration in American institutions. Stormer discussed how he researched and self-published the book, which eventually sold over six million copies, and explained efforts by academic institutions like the University of Michigan to restrict access to it and similar patriotic literature. The show covered themes of communist influence in education, the suppression of conservative thought in libraries, the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and ATF involvement, the Columbine High School shooting and its connection to curriculum promoting death and suicide classes, and recent federal weapons raids in Alabama. Koernke emphasized the importance of citizens documenting government overreach and staying vigilant against what he characterized as ongoing threats to constitutional freedoms.
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Mark Koernke discussed Treasury bonds and penal bonds as tools for financial recovery, emphasized the importance of building personal libraries as a defense against information suppression, and warned about government censorship of books and internet content. He addressed the North American Union threat and urged listeners to contact Representative Virgil Goode regarding House Resolution 40. Koernke promoted personal preparedness including ammunition accumulation, food storage, and currency diversification into Euros as protection against economic collapse and foreign occupation.