"property rights"
34 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed Trump's rhetoric about acquiring Greenland and criticized it as theft from a NATO ally, arguing that Denmark has been a reliable partner and that the U.S. should negotiate rather than threaten. He condemned the criminality of bragging about stealing from allies, drew parallels to historical imperialism, and warned that such rhetoric exposes the criminal mindset of those in power. Koernke also covered Minnesota unrest, the National Guard's proper constitutional role, corruption in law enforcement reporting of crime statistics, the Epstein case, exoskeleton military technology and how to counter it, and provided product recommendations for preparedness items including 80% AR-15 lowers, gas masks, and winter boots.
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Mark Koernke discussed Trump's recent proposals regarding Greenland, Canada, and Mexico as distractions from three core promises: securing the border, deporting illegal aliens, and releasing January 6 political prisoners. He criticized the neoconservative agenda behind these proposals, arguing they would destroy American sovereignty and property rights under NAFTA/GATT frameworks. Koernke promoted medical supplies from ShopMedVet.com, firearms deals, and preparedness measures while addressing caller concerns about gun control legislation in Colorado and Illinois, and historical context about Jewish communist influence in China and Mexico.
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Mark Koernke discussed the aftermath of Hurricane Helene's impact on North Carolina and Tennessee, focusing on Asheville's leftist leadership and lack of civil defense preparedness. He analyzed how older construction survived better than newer builds, emphasized the critical need for independent radio communications (CB, FRS, marine, ham), and warned against surrendering mineral rights to land. Callers reported FEMA confiscating supplies and a Black Hawk helicopter deliberately destroying Cajun Navy aid supplies. Koernke promoted Grindstone Ministries and Guns and Gadgets as legitimate relief organizations, urged property owners not to sign away land rights due to lithium mining interests, and stressed the importance of camera documentation, operational security, and treating relief efforts as military operations.
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Mark Koernke discussed infrastructure vulnerabilities including bridge closures, dam destruction, and vertical control points as tools of government oppression. He covered preparedness measures for potential conflict including water storage, gas masks, medical supplies, and close-quarters weapons. The show addressed Ukraine war escalation, economic collapse concerns, retirement account losses, and the need for militia organization. Koernke emphasized spiritual readiness, property rights defense, and the inevitability of internal conflict while providing practical survival recommendations.
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Mark Koernke discussed communications infrastructure and preparedness on January 9, 2024, emphasizing the importance of diversified radio systems including shortwave receivers, CB radios, and micro FM stations as alternatives to internet-dependent communications. He addressed a caller regarding property disputes in North Dakota involving the Miner family estate and provided legal advice about mechanics liens and tax issues. The show included commentary on Second Amendment threats from New Mexico Governor Grisham's gun emergency order, criticism of political figures across parties, and warnings about economic collapse and coming conflict in 2024.
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The episode featured discussions on grand jury procedures and constitutional rights, followed by extensive coverage of a Bundy Ranch-type standoff developing in southern Oregon between miners of the Gallus Mining District and the BLM over mineral rights and land control. The host also covered a controversial police case involving a corrections officer who killed his wife, a shooting at a North Carolina community college, and a lengthy segment critiquing Nelson Mandela's legacy, including his role as head of a terrorist wing and communist ideology. Callers contributed perspectives on property rights, government overreach, and militia preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed communications infrastructure, CB radio setup, and preparedness for potential grid disruptions. He addressed a caller's concerns about planned grid drills on September 14th and possible bank holidays, emphasizing the need for alternative communications systems. Koernke announced upcoming shortwave broadcasts on WWCR (3215 kHz) and WBCQ starting late September, and detailed practical steps for establishing CB base stations, including antenna installation and radio configuration. He also covered medical supply acquisition, water purification, and militia organization as critical preparedness measures, while criticizing government overreach in Michigan regarding septic tank inspections and property line changes.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness activities including night vision training exercises, ammunition and tactical gear purchasing recommendations, and extensively covered a Vermont property rights case involving Daniel Bonnier, whose firearms training facility faced government demolition orders. The show addressed Second Amendment compliance issues, criticized government overreach, and discussed recent mass shooting incidents allegedly connected to anti-gun agendas. Koernke also covered military equipment access, gas mask preparedness, and various supplier deals for firearms and tactical equipment.
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Mark Koernke discussed the IRS hiring 87,000 armed federal agents as part of a broader expansion of internal law enforcement under Homeland Security, characterizing this as a communist occupation and KGB-style secret police force targeting American citizens. The episode covered weapons systems including M1A rifles, AR-15s, AK variants, and shotgun ammunition configurations, with emphasis on personal preparedness, logistics, and ammunition stockpiling. Callers and the host debated deep fake technology potentially being used to present fake versions of Biden and other officials, discussed the Trump Mar-a-Lago raid, and analyzed the strategic timing of these government actions ahead of October fiscal changes. The show emphasized armed militia organization, property rights as foundational to freedom, and the necessity of confronting what the host characterized as communist threats to America.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness topics including fireworks storage and use, medical supply deals at ShopMedVet.com, and gun rights. He addressed Republican senators negotiating gun control measures behind the scenes, warned about federal tracking of January 6th attendees in Michigan, and critiqued state assembly movements claiming to restore property rights. Koernke emphasized that legal remedies without willingness to fight are ineffective against a corrupt system, and discussed how the government uses cell phone data to track large gatherings.
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Mark Koernke discussed Biden's speech before Congress, criticizing his claims about systemic racism and threats from right-wing extremism while ignoring government corruption. He analyzed the Second Amendment and Bill of Rights with callers, emphasizing the distinction between federal government, state governments, and sovereign people. Topics included vaccine mandates targeting military-age populations, savings bonds and historical financial instruments, property rights violations through eminent domain abuse, and the need for armed preparedness against government overreach. Koernke argued that Obama remains the true power behind Biden's administration and that the political system has become irredeemable, requiring extrajudicial action.
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Mark Koernke discussed Detroit's controversial demolition plan to tear down one-third of residential neighborhoods and force residents to relocate, raising concerns about property rights and eminent domain abuse. The episode focused heavily on a critical child welfare case in New Hampshire involving an infant (Baby Cheyenne) allegedly removed from parents, placed in foster care, found with signs of sexual abuse, and returned to the same foster family—prompting urgent calls to action for listeners to contact state officials and judges. Koernke also covered personal preparedness activities, the Knob Creek gun shoot, and vehicle maintenance before winter.
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Mark Koernke opened with discussion of Arizona's ban on ethnic studies courses in Tucson schools, particularly the Mexican-American studies program that he characterized as promoting divisive ideology rather than American history. He then shifted to covering the Knob Creek Machine Gun Shoot event from the previous weekend, praising attendees and musical performances. The bulk of the episode focused on political commentary regarding the Obama administration, discussing concerns about CFR influence, banking practices, and property seizures. Koernke addressed caller concerns about banks attempting foreclosures without proper documentation and connected these issues to broader themes of eminent domain abuse and communist infiltration of American institutions.
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Mark Koernke discussed a 22-hour siege in Odessa, Texas involving property owner Victor White, two wounded sheriff's deputies, and a land man named Luke Bette. Koernke analyzed the incident as a political operation rather than a criminal matter, noting the authorities' deliberate withholding of the suspect's name and use of Waco-style propaganda rhetoric like "compound." He explained militia signal tracking capabilities using harmonic frequencies and ping systems to monitor government vehicles, and emphasized the importance of CB and marine radio communication for documenting incidents. The show included calls from listeners and repeated donation appeals for the Micro Effect Broadcasting Network.
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Mark Koernke and Don discussed the Civil War's economic causes, focusing on banking interests, property rights, and taxation rather than slavery as the primary driver. They examined post-Civil War reconstruction, European military observation during the conflict, and how northern farmers were displaced by taxes and foreclosures. The conversation shifted to oil industry safety, the Deepwater Horizon disaster as a distraction, Alaska's energy infrastructure crisis, Michigan's capped oil wells, and pipeline maintenance failures. Callers contributed details about Alaska's natural gas potential, the aging Trans-Alaska Pipeline running at 20% capacity, and Michigan's hidden oil reserves being systematically shut down and fortified.
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Nancy Cornke hosted the evening Intelligence Report on July 27, 2010, discussing border security concerns, specifically the seizure of two Texas ranches by the Zeta drug cartel and criticizing President Obama's funding of Mexican border security efforts. The show covered alternative currency adoption in Michigan, solar panel installation projects in New Jersey, and technical challenges with the station's broadcasting equipment. Callers and hosts emphasized the importance of accurate information dissemination, property rights, and self-defense against invasion, while also promoting local business support and independent internet broadcasting initiatives.
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Mark Koernke discussed health remedies including zapper technology and detox formulas for treating fungal infections and parasites, drawing on historical examples from Vietnam and World War II. Callers raised topics including Civil Defense preparedness, militia organization, historical treaties (particularly the 1765 Proclamation and 1783 Treaty), and local property rights disputes involving court proceedings and beaver dam management.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia training exercises and deployments, particularly a 24th Regimental Combat Team field exercise at Camp Emmerich in Michigan and ongoing Arizona border operations. He covered preparedness topics including food preservation techniques (pickling, vinegar production), gas mask training, and equipment needs for deployed militia units. A caller from New York described ongoing harassment by attorneys attempting to access his property to remove beaver dams, causing environmental damage and flooding downstream. Koernke also provided economic updates on stock markets, precious metals, and currency exchanges, noting bank payment failures and currency fluctuations.
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Mark Koernke hosted the morning Intelligence Report on May 29, 2009, discussing preparedness, property rights abuses, jury nullification tactics, and patriot movement coordination. The show featured caller Michael from Missouri reporting CIA recruitment ads appearing on their live stream feed, discussion of deer hunting and food preservation in Michigan, ammunition scarcity at gun shows, concerns about government overreach under the new administration, and a detailed case involving property theft allegations against Bob Miner in North Dakota with contact information for local officials. Koernke also promoted night vision equipment, Republic Magazine, Faith and Freedom Sentinel publication, and encouraged listeners to support patriot media and participate in training exercises.
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Mark Koernke and Larry Lawson discussed food production and gardening for the 2009 growing season, covering topics such as soil pH management, seed storage, preservation methods including canning and drying, and self-sufficiency strategies. They addressed wildlife management and varmint control using traps and modern security technology like motion sensors and LED lighting. The show concluded with discussion of a property rights case involving Larry William Wilcox in Michigan's Imlay City area, where federal and state agents conducted an early morning raid related to court filings and property disputes, and commentary on UCC filings, sovereign property rights, and militia preparedness in Michigan.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Michael Desser discussed income tax law and constitutional rights with guest Mr. R, who promoted Peter Hendrickson's book 'Cracking the Code' as the definitive resource on understanding the Sixteenth Amendment and income tax statutes. The conversation covered the distinction between common-law income (fruits of labor, which cannot be taxed) and privileged income (government employment, which can be taxed), the history of tax withholding beginning in 1937 with Social Security, and the importance of proper legal notice and contract principles. The hosts also addressed federal overreach, the voluntary nature of Social Security and military drafts, property rights, and border security issues in Arizona, while criticizing both major political parties for expanding the police state regardless of which held power.
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Mark Koernke and Don Thatcher discussed the 2008 financial crisis, criticizing mainstream economic propaganda that portrayed massive national debt as acceptable. They emphasized their long-standing advice to acquire physical silver and gold as a hedge against fiat currency collapse, contrasting this with an economist's failed silver speculation in the 1980s. The hosts addressed property devaluation, foreclosures, and the collapse of consumer spending, arguing that Americans should abandon the stock market and debt-based systems. They fielded a caller (Marcus from Georgia) about mortgage structures and land ownership, discussed fuel price drops and vehicle repossession gluts, and warned that foreign occupation forces would seize valuable properties from collaborators. The show concluded with commentary on federal agencies (ATF, FBI) as parasitic entities serving foreign interests rather than the Constitution.
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Mark Koernke discussed American history and sovereignty, focusing on British imperial influence over the United States from the Revolutionary War through the present day. He covered the Bar Association's contamination of the legal system, the implementation of surveillance infrastructure disguised as birdhouses, and the Global Synchronous Property Survey System designed to control land through satellite monitoring and purchasing caps on building supplies. Koernke fielded calls from listeners including Al from South Dakota on property rights and the Levelers, and George from Florida on military service and resistance to tyranny, emphasizing the need for Americans to actively defend constitutional freedoms rather than submit passively.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia organizing in Iowa in response to FEMA overreach during disaster relief, praising citizens who armed themselves to protect property from federal seizure. He spent the majority of the episode on Weapons Wednesday covering the history and design of John Browning firearms, particularly the 1911 and Browning High Power pistols, emphasizing their reliability and one-handed operation. Koernke warned of threats to the Constitution and Bill of Rights, criticized college programs studying militia as propaganda, and urged listeners to arm themselves, stockpile ammunition, and organize locally while supporting the Patriot movement through donations.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia organization and training exercises, including a successful 1000-yard rifle shoot at Ogham Range with nearly 700 participants and demonstrations of .50 caliber semi-automatic rifles. He promoted the Colonial Marine Anti-Armor Militia Manual ($4 donation) and announced upcoming training exercises in Oklahoma. Koernke addressed fuel and food supply issues, arguing that fuel shortages are fabricated and that grain surpluses in Southern Illinois represent opportunities for militia preparedness. He discussed foreclosure crises and county/municipal corruption in property sales, linking it to bond schemes. Callers contributed perspectives on food production solutions, currency devaluation, NAFTA's impact, and the choice between civil resistance and militia operations.
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Mark Koernke discussed border security issues, property rights threats, and economic preparedness strategies. He warned against compromise with government overreach, criticized stock market investments as a gambling casino, and advocated for alternative currency holdings in euros and precious metals ahead of the predicted Amero currency union. In the second hour, Koernke and co-host Don covered alcohol fuel production as an alternative energy solution, explaining how to modify vehicles to run on ethanol and the technical specifications for building efficient alcohol-burning engines.
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Mark Koernke warned veterans about VA psychiatric evaluation calls designed to disarm them under Public Law 110-180, urging listeners to refuse participation. He promoted East German M10M gas masks from Maine Military Supply at $4 per mask as affordable preparedness. Guest Bruce discussed Mexican grey wolf reintroduction in the Southwest, presenting evidence of attacks on livestock and people, arguing that eco-activists and federal agencies are using wolves as a control mechanism to restrict rural access and property rights while suppressing incident reports.
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Mark Koernke discussed ammunition shortages and their strategic implications, advising listeners to purchase ammunition and reloading supplies at gun shows and from online retailers like Wideners. He emphasized the importance of sharing technical knowledge and reloading expertise across patriot networks, warned against intentionally defective weapons manuals, and provided detailed guidance on ammunition procurement, reloading production methods, and quality control. The show also addressed a caller's property rights issue involving code enforcement in Florida and touched on Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign.
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Mark Koernke discussed practical weapons maintenance and preparedness on Weapons Wednesday, focusing on firearm cleaning, cosmoline removal from stored weapons, and assembling affordable cleaning kits from dollar store items. He addressed caller Dave from New York regarding land disputes at Six Nations in Ontario involving government-backed development on First Nation territory, connecting the issue to broader property rights concerns. The show emphasized the importance of maintaining weapons systems, preserving spare parts, and understanding that private property rights are foundational to constitutional government.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, urging listeners to donate to support Paul's fundraising goals and make a political statement against globalist candidates. He analyzed media coverage of Paul, praised grassroots supporters, and addressed property rights threats through the GIS (Geographic Information System) zoning initiative being promoted by the UN and federal government, which would restrict building materials sales and allow warrantless home inspections. Koernke also discussed militia history, comparing the American Revolution militias to modern armed forces, and warned about foreign workers in Iraq and the United States as economic parasites.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 presidential election, focusing on Ron Paul's campaign and criticizing both major political parties as corrupt and controlled by globalist interests. He analyzed the Federal Reserve Act's passage on Christmas Eve 1913 with only four senators present, explained how the 17th Amendment changed senatorial representation from state ambassadors to direct election, and detailed how the removal of state border definitions from state constitutions undermines federalism. Koernke also addressed contract law, government overreach on property rights (using smoking bans as an example), and promoted preparedness and militia readiness. The show included caller contributions and announcements about Liberty Tree Radio video projects, including a planned Revolutionary War documentary series.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple interconnected threats to American sovereignty and property rights, including the GIS (Global Information and Surveillance) system being implemented at township levels to control land use and restrict property rights through satellite and GPS technology. He covered the Rio Treaty and foreclosure of American national debt by international bankers in 1977, the transfer of U.S. infrastructure (toll roads, bridges, turnpikes) to foreign entities including Spanish companies, and the connection between psychiatric medications (Prozac), school shootings, and the militarization of schools. Koernke also addressed Amish resistance to mandatory RFID cattle tagging, the International Building Code, UN biosphere designations of national parks, and called for citizens to investigate and resist these programs at local levels.
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Mark Koernke discussed the historical parallels between the American Revolution and contemporary patriot concerns, focusing on property rights, eminent domain abuse, and the role of militia as a check against tyranny. He emphasized that the founding fathers at Lexington and Concord did not want conflict but understood their obligation to defend liberty, drawing comparisons to modern citizens' responsibilities. The show covered how eminent domain has been corrupted from its original purpose of public works into a tool for private profit, and explored the philosophical basis of property rights rooted in the concept of personal time and labor. Koernke and co-host Don discussed the importance of community organizing, jury nullification, and maintaining an armed citizenry as a deterrent to government overreach, while also promoting self-sufficiency and local mutual aid.
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This episode of the Militia Town Hall Meeting focused primarily on a property rights dispute in upstate New York involving beaver dam removal. Dave, a caller from the region, reported that state officials and deputies broke down his gate and removed two beaver dams despite the sheriff's assurance they would only remove one, causing significant water flow increases and threatening a youth camp on the property. The hosts provided detailed contact information for the New York Department of Environmental Conservation and discussed strategies for filing complaints across multiple agencies. The show also covered fundraising efforts for Liberty Tree Radio's yearly operating costs, product reviews of LED flashlights, and brief discussions of preparedness equipment and upcoming events like the Knob Creek machine gun shoot.