"military spending"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, critiquing the Obama administration's claim that combat brigades had been withdrawn from Iraq as semantic manipulation. He analyzed vehicle engineering problems with the Stryker armored personnel carrier, compared military spending and mercenary compensation to soldier pay, and addressed the exploitation of Iraqi oil resources. The show covered militia preparedness activities, including an upcoming Labor Day weekend communications exercise and artillery training classes. Koernke promoted Arizona border deployment efforts as a patriot movement response to drug trafficking and Mexican military incursions, framing it as phase one of a larger security initiative. He also advertised night vision equipment sales and discussed the importance of geographic knowledge and historical context in understanding geopolitical conflicts.
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Mark Koernke discussed gun control legislation and market manipulation tactics by the Obama administration, including delays on firearm imports, ammunition restrictions, and parallel bills designed to confuse opposition. He explained how to request legislation directly from Congress and the Government Printing Office to expose these tactics. Koernke also covered militia training resources, weather patterns in Michigan, and criticized U.S. military spending overseas while domestic infrastructure deteriorated, particularly regarding opium production in Afghanistan.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Don discussed deer hunting season opening in Michigan, economic damage from military spending and contractor overpricing (particularly Halliburton), illegal immigration's impact on wages and employment, and the role of music and sound frequencies in social control and conditioning. The second half featured caller James from New Jersey discussing how music industry playlists are centrally controlled via satellite feeds, the suppression of songs with anti-establishment messages (such as The Kinks' '20th Century Man' and Tom Petty's 'Last DJ'), and how harmonics and frequencies in music are used to influence population behavior—drawing parallels to CIA drug programs and the need for independent broadcasting to discuss these topics.