"satellite radio"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the Nashville school shooting involving a transgender shooter, attributing it to psychiatric medication side effects and progressive social engineering rather than gun access. He played a 20-minute monologue from Louder with Crowder analyzing the shooting and mental health narratives, then shifted to broader topics including food security threats to European agriculture (particularly Holland), the Biden administration's apparent indifference to the tragedy, historical parallels to Vietnam War leadership changes, and the need for militia preparedness and alternative communications infrastructure. The show emphasized that the real enemy is the federal government and globalist elites, not individual perpetrators.
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Mark Koernke discussed Time magazine's planned anti-militia propaganda piece, warning that the coordinated attack was planned six months in advance as part of desperation damage control by the establishment. He emphasized that militia units across America are growing and that citizens should focus on recalls and elections to remove incompetent federal officials, citing successful local recall efforts in Michigan. Koernke provided detailed tactical guidance on firearms, warning against modifications and emphasizing accuracy over volume fire, while cautioning listeners about federal agents' willingness to kill local law enforcement. He promoted the upcoming Knob Creek Machine Gun Shoot (October 8-10) and discussed satellite radio options for listening to the show.
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Mark Koernke discussed historical patterns of government manipulation and false flag operations, including the Vietnam War, oil crises, and the 1970s recession. He analyzed the removal of Vice President Spiro Agnew through threats by Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig, the subsequent placement of Nelson Rockefeller as VP, and assassination attempts on Gerald Ford by individuals connected to intelligence agencies. Koernke drew parallels between past and present geopolitical events, including the Gulf of Tonkin incident, 9/11, and the Iraq War, arguing they followed similar propaganda patterns. He also critiqued the music industry's use of payola and satellite-controlled programming as tools for mass manipulation and mind control.