"no-knock warrants"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed a SWAT raid on an organic food co-op in Ohio by the Department of Agriculture, where armed agents pointed weapons at women and children while the owner's father was deployed in Iraq. Koernke expressed outrage at the escalating pattern of government overreach, comparing it to pre-Waco abuses, and argued that political remedies have been exhausted. He emphasized mental preparedness for armed conflict, discussed ammunition and weapons availability at gun shows, and paid tribute to deceased militia member Bob Borne. The show included caller Andrew from Ohio reporting on a Dayton gun show and ammunition pricing surveys.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and field sanitation with guest Mike from Arizona, covering topics including proper waste management, cooking and sleeping area separation, water safety, portable stoves, and lighting options for emergency situations. The show featured caller George from Pennsylvania discussing black helicopter sightings and community information distribution strategies, as well as George from Florida raising concerns about mass casualty management in potential crisis scenarios. Koernke emphasized the importance of personal preparedness across multiple domains—food, sanitation, supplies, transportation, and communications—and discussed alternative currency systems like the Liberty Dollar as a means of economic resistance to federal banking control.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Fetcher discussed federal overreach in law enforcement, focusing on a no-knock raid in Georgia that resulted in the death of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston. They analyzed how commercial informants and federal programs incentivize illegal searches, comparing tactics to East German surveillance states. The hosts examined the erosion of jury trials in American courts, attributing the decline to financial incentives for judges and lawyers embedded in the legal system. They also covered a controversial incident in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where school staff staged a fake active shooter scenario that traumatized sixth-grade students, which Koernke characterized as psychological conditioning tied to anti-gun agendas. The episode promoted Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and encouraged grassroots activism.