1. In 2007, the San Diego Reader reported that Mark Dice had his own one-hour radio talk show: "Resistance Radio" produced by Genesis Communications Network, broadcasting on Sunday nights.

1. In 2007, the San Diego Reader reported that Mark Dice had his own one-hour radio talk show: "Resistance Radio" produced by Genesis Communications Network, broadcasting on Sunday nights.
Mark Dice said he was living in Vista, California, and that he had started a website at www.
Mark Dice has been described as a right-wing, conservative conspiracy theorist who has provided the media with his input on a broad array of topics.
In June 2008, Mark Dice launched "Operation Inform the Soldiers", an effort to send DVDs, letters, and declassified government documents to US service members in Iraq.
Mark Dice promoted the Jade Helm 15 conspiracy theories, claiming that the 2015 military exercises were preparation for a declaration of martial law in the United States.
Mark Dice described celebrities' connection to the Illuminati as the pursuit of power via message of materialism.
Mark Dice called Super Bowl halftime shows of the 2010s "elaborate Illuminati rituals hidden in plain sight".
Mark Dice published a YouTube video denouncing the Super Bowl 50 halftime show as "gay Pride propaganda".
In October 2016, Mark Dice helped uncover that YouTube prankster Joey Salads had staged a YouTube video which cast opponents of Donald Trump in a negative light.
Mark Dice called the video from Salads "shameful" and posted a response video in which he showed behind-the-scenes footage from Salads that proved the video was staged.
Mark Dice expressed concern that the video would deflect attention away from actual instances of Trump supporters being attacked, citing the firebombing of a Republican office in North Carolina as an example.
In November 2016, Mark Dice attributed the rise of the alt-right to being "a direct consequence of social justice warriors trying to shut down conservatives on social media and ruin their careers by organizing cyber mobs to harass people's employers".
Mark Dice cited opposition towards political correctness as a reason for people gravitating toward the alt-right.
In late 2016, Mark Dice helped organize an unsuccessful boycott of Rogue One, a Star Wars film he called "feminist propaganda" on Twitter.
Mark Dice encouraged his fans to boycott Grubhub in November 2016 after Grubhub's CEO Matt Maloney released a letter that was interpreted as an attack against Trump supporters.
On July 11,2019, Mark Dice attended the White House social media summit alongside other extremist figures.
In 2019, Mark Dice said that his achievements were being downplayed in his Wikipedia article.
Mark Dice has spread false claims of election fraud related to the 2020 US presidential election, resulting in his content on YouTube and Facebook being placed behind content warnings.
In mid-January 2021, Mark Dice equated the storming of the United States Capitol to the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, saying that "By BLM standards, it would be what you call a 'mostly peaceful' protest".
Mark Dice misattributed a quote to Rogan that was actually made by American radio host and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones in September 2020 when the Spotify censorship controversy started.
Mark Dice formulated one such petition in 2013 to repeal the First Amendment to the United States Constitution; by invoking the suggestion of supporting President Obama, Mark Dice found people in Southern California willing to sign.
In February 2021, Mark Dice had more than 600,000 Twitter followers.
Mark Dice was reported living in Vista in 2007, and in 2019 he was reported in Pacific Beach, San Diego.