"nra leadership"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke hosted a Friday afternoon broadcast covering multiple topics including gun control provisions hidden in a fiscal year 2023 appropriations bill, New York's concealed carry improvement act and ongoing lawsuits against it, concerns about NRA leadership transparency and financial mismanagement, and extensive discussion of border security issues, cartel activity, and drug smuggling operations. The show included caller contributions about military operations in Arizona, Afghan withdrawal reports, and the use of candy as drug smuggling vehicles.
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Mark Koernke discussed recent mass shooting incidents and media coverage patterns, arguing that shootings are engineered events designed to advance gun control agendas. He analyzed how media misidentifies weapons to condition the public and noted that most mass shooters have been on psychiatric medications like Prozac. Koernke criticized NRA leadership for allegedly being compromised and called for members to vote them out. He promoted Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign with a fundraising push for December 15th, discussed preparedness and militia infrastructure, addressed concerns about foreign troops being positioned to occupy America, and took calls from listeners about child protective services abuses, the Oklahoma City bombing, and the need for armed resistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Veterans Disarmament Bill and criticized the NRA leadership for betraying veterans by allowing the legislation to advance without informing members. He covered the history of rifle designs, particularly the AR-15, AR-180, and Stoner rifle, explaining why the AR-180 was superior but politically sidelined. Koernke promoted HK 91/G3 magazines at $2 each and his book 'Battle for the Republic: The Winter War' for $25, providing mailing instructions. He fielded caller questions about magazine compatibility, rifle variants (RPK vs FPK), ammunition storage, and emergency cartridge substitution. A caller named Rob critiqued the movement's over-emphasis on firearms, arguing that sanitation and waste disposal were more critical during Hurricane Rita, which Koernke acknowledged as valid preparedness concerns.