"prison labor"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the mobilization of U.S. military reserve forces (IRR and Select Reserve) by the Biden administration, warning of potential escalation toward World War III and nuclear conflict. He covered Chinese negotiations with Michigan officials regarding prison labor for factories on Chinese-controlled property, detailed preparedness measures including gas masks and surplus equipment acquisition, and strongly promoted the film 'Sound of Freedom' as exposing child trafficking, urging listeners to watch it and stay through the credits to see actual raid footage. The show included extensive product recommendations for ammunition, tactical gear, and EMP-resistant vehicles.
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On July 30, 2008, Mark Koernke's show featured discussions on Weapons Wednesday covering water purification methods for survival preparedness, including iodine tablets, boiling, and Berkey filters. The hosts discussed the David and Candy Oleson case, where David was convicted of owning a fully automatic firearm (allegedly a malfunction) and sentenced to 30 months; Gun Owners of America is helping Candy with mortgage and car payments while the case is appealed. The show promoted a beach party fundraiser with non-perishable food donations for the Oleson family. Hosts also discussed the M1 carbine paratrooper model as a reliable firearm option, the potential sale of Mossberg firearms company by heir Jim Moss, and detailed accounts of federal raids on the hosts' property, including confiscated items and damage to computer systems. The final segment addressed federal prison labor practices, sentencing disparities, and Michigan's prison overcrowding issues.
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Mark Koernke discussed the expansion of the American penal system as a tool of social control, drawing parallels to the Soviet Gulag system. He covered proposed prisoner transfer programs to foreign countries, the creation of new crimes to expand the prison population, and the Council on Foreign Relations' post-WWII global reorganization plans. Koernke analyzed the Korean War as a manufactured crisis designed to increase UN authority, praised General MacArthur's independent military action at Inchon, and addressed caller Dave's observations about suspicious staging and media presence at recent law enforcement incidents, including comparisons to Waco and other government operations.
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Mark Koernke discussed the transfer of prisoners between states (Arizona to Indiana, California to Illinois) as part of an illegal and fraudulent system of penal bonds that monetize incarcerated individuals as collateral. He explained how states generate bonds against prisoner numbers and trade these instruments on global markets, creating fictional duplicate bonds when prisoners are transferred across state lines. Koernke argued this system represents modern slavery and indentured servitude, with connections to investment firms like Merrill Lynch, and warned that the expansion of the prison industry (from 1 million to 3 million prisoners in recent years) mirrors Soviet gulags. He urged listeners to investigate their investment portfolios for involvement in penal bonds and cautioned that border collapse under NAFTA could lead to prisoner trafficking to foreign countries.