"michigan dnr"
19 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed intentional government confusion tactics, the Department of Justice's contradictory stance on Second Amendment violations regarding mail-in firearms, Michigan's proposed DNR restructuring and anti-gun legislation, FISA extension despite Trump's campaign promises, Canadian emigration restrictions, and the failed Iranian weapons operation. He emphasized the need for local militia organization, documentation of political enemies, and preparation for inevitable conflict.
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Mark Koernke hosted Weapons Wednesday on April 1, 2020, discussing affordable firearm options including air rifles and AR-15 build kits, body armor solutions from surplus sources, and ammunition availability during the early COVID-19 lockdowns. The show covered Michigan DNR harassment of fishermen at remote access points, the city of Comings' controversial social distancing enforcement order with deputized special police, and constitutional concerns about government overreach. Guest Craig from MaineMilitary.com discussed the $2.2 trillion stimulus bill, quoted David Crockett's congressional speech on unconstitutional charity spending, and addressed Ron Paul's coronavirus hoax article. The episode included extensive product recommendations from Classic Firearms, CDNN Sports, Sportsman's Guide, and UN Ammo, with particular emphasis on budget-conscious preparedness and ammunition sourcing.
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Mark Koernke hosted Weapons Wednesday on April 1, 2020, discussing affordable firearms and body armor options for preparedness, including air rifles, AR-15 variants, and surplus tactical gear. The show covered ammunition availability during the early COVID-19 pandemic, reviewed specific product deals from retailers like Classic Firearms, CDNN Sports, and Sportsman's Guide, and addressed Michigan DNR enforcement actions against fishermen at remote access points. Koernke criticized government overreach during the pandemic, including a Comings, Michigan order requiring special police to enforce six-foot social distancing with fines up to $1,000 and jail time. Guest Craig from MaineMilitary.com discussed constitutional violations in the $2.2 trillion stimulus package and read the historical Davy Crockett speech opposing unconstitutional charity appropriations. The evening segment featured ammunition sourcing advice, detailed instructions on reloading and repurposing blank ammunition components, and caller reports of license plate reader cameras being installed in Michigan.
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Mark Koernke hosted Weapons Wednesday on April 1, 2020, discussing affordable firearms options including air rifles, AR-15 builds, and surplus body armor from various retailers. The show covered ammunition availability during the early COVID-19 pandemic, reviewed tactical gear deals, and fielded caller questions about rifle configurations. In the evening segment, guest host Craig presented a constitutional lesson based on Davy Crockett's congressional speech opposing unconstitutional charity appropriations, drawing parallels to the $2.2 trillion stimulus bill. The broadcast included extensive discussion of government overreach during lockdowns, DNR harassment of Michigan fishermen, and concerns about emerging police state tactics including license plate readers.
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Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed Michigan prison expansion, including plans to reopen the GEO private prison in Baldwin to house inmates from Washington State and the East Coast, raising concerns about cruel separation of families and infrastructure costs. They analyzed the recent escape from Clinton Correctional Facility in New York, detailing the multiple security failures and inside assistance required, and contrasted it with a successful Upper Peninsula prison escape involving a guard's predictable routine and a stolen snowmobile. The show also covered Jade Helm 15 operations, the Baker's Green Acres farm seizure dispute with Michigan DNR, and featured Don's night vision technology sales with entry-level digital gun sights starting at $11.55 with a discount code.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, self-sufficiency, and patriotic themes on the morning broadcast of June 5, 2015. The show featured discussion of wildlife management in Michigan, including turkey populations and DNR policies, followed by a fundraising appeal for the Micro Effect organization requesting minimum $25 donations with 52 prizes available. Koernke emphasized focusing on domestic American issues rather than foreign conflicts, and promoted the show's networks and website for donations.
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Mark Koernke and Don discussed Michigan DNR regulations requiring hunting licenses even on private property, wildlife management issues including feral pigs and cougars, rabies vaccination procedures, and night vision technology transitions from green-screen to white-light devices. Callers contributed stories about wildlife encounters, military service experiences, and current events including Hunter Biden's discharge from the Navy for cocaine use and a criminal case involving sexual assault of an elderly woman. The show also covered the B-52 bomber's 60-year service history.
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Mark Koernke discussed logistics and resource coordination for the Bundy Ranch standoff in Nevada, emphasizing the need for organized supply chains, medical support, and personnel management. He covered ammunition and preparedness supply availability, provided detailed guidance on food storage calculations using spreadsheets, and fielded caller questions about hunting regulations, firearms trading, and ammunition sourcing. The show included updates from field operatives regarding Oath Keepers presence and security protocols at the ranch.
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Mark Koernke discussed weather patterns in Michigan, comparing the current winter to historical snowfall events and explaining how Great Lakes ice affects regional climate. He analyzed the geopolitical situation in Ukraine and Crimea, emphasizing Russia's need for warm-water ports and explaining why the conflict is not primarily about Ukraine itself. Koernke addressed ammunition shortages resulting from the Ukraine conflict, recommending ball ammunition purchases and discussing why Russian and Ukrainian ammunition supplies are being diverted to military use. He promoted Baker's Green Acres, a local farm facing regulatory harassment from Michigan's Department of Natural Resources, and detailed a case in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, where a sheriff's department employee allegedly orchestrated the theft of a family's home contents with assistance from other deputies. Koernke discussed systemic corruption in Michigan's judicial and law enforcement systems, particularly in Isabella County and surrounding areas.
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Mark Koernke and a caller spent the majority of this episode analyzing photographs of the ousted Ukrainian president's mansion, debunking media claims of opulence by demonstrating that nearly all furnishings, decorative items, and artwork were mass-produced goods available from retailers like Lowe's, Bud K, and Chinese suppliers rather than rare or expensive pieces. The hosts examined specific items including ceramic parrots, fantasy swords, suits of armor, pool tables, pianos, motorcycles, and classic cars, explaining their actual retail costs and origins. The episode also briefly covered a court hearing involving Mr. Baker and Michigan DNR compliance issues.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple topics including light bulb regulations, the Ukraine crisis and alleged Jewish mob involvement, Michigan state issues including Agenda 21 and the DNR's enforcement against Baker's Green Acres farm, toll road privatization schemes in Texas and Colorado being handed to foreign entities (Spain and Australia), rat control methods using improvised weapons, and the dangers of foreign control over American infrastructure. He took a caller from Texas about toll road corruption and another about rat extermination techniques, and criticized government overreach and international corporate influence throughout.
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Mark Koernke discussed zoning ordinances and property rights restrictions in Michigan counties, particularly Sheboygan County's new regulations limiting recreational vehicles and travel trailers on private property as part of Agenda 21 implementation. The show featured extended discussion of Baker's Green Acres farm and its legal battle with the Michigan DNR over pig breeding standards, framed as part of a broader attack on small farmers and food independence. Callers Bob and Don emphasized the need for local activism, Tea Party involvement, and community resistance to government overreach. The latter half of the broadcast shifted to militia preparedness, constitutional resistance, and historical comparisons to the American Revolution, with discussion of odds against federal forces and the importance of equipping potential volunteers with AR-15 rifles and tactical supplies.
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Mark Koernke hosted a morning episode featuring Mark Baker from Baker's Green Acres, a Michigan farmer engaged in a legal battle with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources over the classification of his pigs as feral animals. Baker discussed his upcoming four-day trial on March 11, 2014, in Lake City, Michigan, and emphasized the need for constitutional enforcement at the county sheriff level, citing Sheriff Richard Mack's work as a model. The episode covered regulatory overreach, the importance of local law enforcement protecting citizens' rights, and Baker's educational farm programs teaching food production and self-sufficiency skills. Koernke connected the case to broader patriot movement themes about government tyranny and the need for citizen activism through phone calls to elected officials.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Baker's Green Acres farm situation in Michigan, where the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) issued a Declatory Ruling targeting heritage breed pigs as alleged invasive species. Guest Mark Baker, an ex-Air Force farmer, detailed how the DNR threatened to kill his pigs by April 1st and imposed arbitrary $10,000-per-pig fines despite no legal basis. Koernke connected this to Agenda 21 and broader attacks on independent family farms, comparing it to similar government overreach in Ohio targeting cattle farmers. The episode emphasized property rights violations, government corruption, and the need for farmers to unite against regulatory agencies he characterized as mercenary forces serving international interests rather than American citizens.
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Mark Koernke and Don discussed Michigan pig farmer Mark Baker's legal battle against the DNR over livestock regulations, framing it as part of a broader "war on food" and Agenda 21 implementation. The show covered night vision technology specifications and maintenance procedures, with detailed explanations of first, second, third, and fourth generation devices. Callers raised concerns about controlled opposition, surveillance through facial recognition at protests, and the risks of public organizing, leading to extended commentary on the 1933 alleged military coup, FDR's communist sympathies, and critiques of the "American Spring" movement as potentially manipulated. The hosts emphasized armed preparedness over peaceful protest and discussed anarchism, the Tea Party movement, and international banking conspiracies.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, emergency communications, and self-sufficiency resources during this morning broadcast. He promoted several suppliers including All Electronics, Electronic Goldmine, FreezeDryGuy, and Baker's Green Acres for obtaining surplus equipment, freeze-dried food, and locally-raised heritage livestock. Koernke emphasized the importance of building radio networks through micro FM stations, collecting older radio equipment, and acquiring field telephone connectors for emergency communications. He also discussed the Baker's Green Acres farm case against Michigan DNR and encouraged listeners to support local farmers producing high-quality food outside the industrial food system.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness for winter weather and food storage, detailed technical specifications for semi-automatic rifle designs including the B7V belt-fed .50 caliber platform and Zussman Ackermann designs with CNC manufacturing capabilities, analyzed Russian military deployments to Syria in response to potential U.S. intervention, criticized U.S. government foreign policy regarding Syria and alleged Israeli involvement, warned of potential false flag attacks on U.S. coastal cities, discussed heritage pig farming in Michigan and attacks on family farms via regulatory agencies, and reported on USDA approval of Chinese poultry processors to ship meat to the U.S. without country-of-origin labeling.
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Mark Koernke discussed predator management and wildlife control in the second hour of the show, focusing on feral dog packs that devastated Michigan in the 1980s-1990s, feral pig infestations across Michigan counties, and coyote problems in Texas. He provided detailed techniques for deterring predators using human and dog hair, homemade noise-makers from recycled cans, and discussed hunting and preparing various game animals including woodchuck, rabbit, snake, and squirrel. Callers shared experiences with animal control issues and predator encounters, and Koernke emphasized the importance of self-sufficiency and preparedness regarding wildlife threats.
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Mark Koernke and Don Betcher discussed the economic collapse of Michigan's industrial base, focusing on Dow Chemical's announcement of 10,000 job cuts and 20 facility closures by year-end 2008. They analyzed the loss of manufacturing expertise and skilled labor due to outsourcing, comparing it to similar devastation from Pfizer and Daimler-Chrysler acquisitions. Guest Bruce Hemings (Buckshot) reported on wolf predation in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, documenting a 70% decline in deer harvest since wolves were introduced, and criticized the Michigan DNR for denying the connection while raising hunting license fees. The hosts discussed ammunition shortages, gun store raids, and the broader pattern of federal policies (NAFTA, GATT) designed to destabilize American industry and control the population.