Mark Koernke discussed food production and preparedness, noting excellent winter wheat and fruit crops in Michigan while warning of potential engineered food shortages. He addressed banking fraud, specifically how banks are now imposing 7-10 day holds on direct deposits despite electronic transfers being instantaneous, urging listeners to abandon direct deposit. Koernke covered the history of cash crop suppression (tobacco, hemp) and how bankers have systematically destroyed farmer independence. He reported on illegal foreclosures across multiple states, including cases in Detroit, Minnesota, and Wisconsin where judges and mortgage companies with no legal standing are seizing homes. The show included discussion of the Dayton Hamvention, alternative fuels, economic indicators, and recommendations to watch 1970s films depicting Depression-era conditions.
Live 365. The Bedfan's thin streamline design is simple to install and fits between your bed and foot board. And did I mention how much money you're going to save by turning down your air conditioner overnight? Please don't let another sleepless night go by. Get your Bedfan by going to bedfan.com or calling area code 210-632-8280. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, we've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave, in this the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost. You're no more than a slave. Invist the land of the free and home of the brave. You vie permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money is spent, your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. and your daughters visit so their children and labor leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Both sons of the Republic arise. Take a stand. Defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land. Preserve our great Republic in each God given right. And pray to God to keep the torture freedom bright. As I awoke, he vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now his parents trampled each God-given right. We only watched him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories. South, central, east, and northwest. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on libertytreeradio.4mg.com, pbn.4mg.com, and we're on live 365, then go to Liberty Tree Radio. You will also find us on AM&FM micro stations, CBE base stations, and Ultra Net Technologies east and west of the Mississippi, along with Southern and Central Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. We're also in the Hallmark Network, 8 colonial states, to include expansions into the West and eventually the Golden Spike event is coming up. Three different networks. The third one, unnamed, we're calling it Unit. Unit, oh, there we go. Anyway, the O group is doing a fine job. Everybody has been doing their part. The one unit is not as big, but they have been taking after the Hallmark team. So I want to say thank you there to the restaurant crew for all the fine work you're doing in educating and training more people, gals and girls, and young men and old either way. So today's date, Larry, is? He is the 12th of May, 2009. As we know, everybody is looking at that road trip down to Dayton, O'Hara Arena. We have the Dayton, O'Hara Hamvention coming up here pretty soon, the Hamfest. If you are anywhere in reasonable driving distance, take the time, get down there and check it out. But take your walking shoes, number one. Take a sun hat and also something might protect you from the rain. Yeah, a little rice hat from Vietnam or from Southeast Asia would work, but a booney or something or like a good old farm hat might work just as well. Also make sure you get a poncho with you. That's just something you put in your utility bag. Mark, before we go much farther here, Larry, are you on a, do you have your speakerphone on or something? Okay, I got a buzz on the line. I'm trying to figure out where it's coming from. Oh, I've got a problem with the line. It was too bad I can hang out. No, I'll clean it up the best I can on this end. We can live with it. I was just trying to figure out where it was coming from. It is me. I do have a problem. There we go. And again, we can do quality control here. Why? Because we own the station. Anyway, it's live too. And real quick on that note, if you can get down there Friday, Saturday or Sunday, remember on Sundays when everybody's closing down there at the Dayton-Hara-Hamfest? Guys, the stuff they don't want to carry home, they leave in boxes and there's all kinds of fun things that are left behind. So if you pay attention when someone leaves and there's big boxes laying there and they've already packed the truck up and they're driving away, that's when it's time for you to go and check and see what it is that was left behind. You never know what you're going to find. It might be matches or mates. to some piece of equipment you already have or use. If it's old, if it's new, if it's everything in between, you're going to find it at the Dayton O'Hara Ham Fest, which is the biggest on the planet. So it's the big one. This is the big one you want to get there. And you want to make sure you have a chop of the carrot and good stuff out with either way you will do it. So I'll tell you what now, real quick with that in motion, Larry, we've got beautiful blue skies and kind of a What was your day like down there in Indiana? down there at the Harrah Hamfest especially this year. The weather, southern central Ohio, Dayton, take a look where it is on the map. It's in the middle of the state lined up kind of, a little off on angle, you can line up with Cincinnati, but the cool thing is it's down far enough that you're going to find some nice weather. You may get a little rain, that's why we said take your poncho common sense. Also, if you can, take a cart with you two guys because you might run into something really big that you want to drag back to the car and carrying it or having to figure out some of the ways. Well, in other words, pulling it, two guys, big stick, that probably not going to happen. Otherwise, you carry it, you get tired, you stop. A wagon would do. A two-wheel dollar, you'd be creative. Whatever you got in your home there, you can take along. It might be useful as a tool in that category. I'd take a van or truck if you can. You can do a car, but if you take a van or truck, you might have more room for something you just don't expect. You go, oh man, I can take that back with me. Other things, well it is a planting season. Larry, what should we be looking at? Again, food production is critical. It is as critical ammunition right now, people, and all of the other technologies that are part of your insurance policy. We're looking at a beautiful growing season so far. Where should we be? Well, you should by now have your We did get chilly here. We got down to about 41 degrees, which is kind of shaking off now. A little bit for the watermelons, the melons, and hot before the... I think one of the most interesting things here too is that obviously they're quietly pushing out for the idea that there's going to be crisis in the fall with regard to food too, which is me rather fastening. I just had several conversations. Just had a farmer drop by with one of his spreaders on the way down the road here. And one of the things that he mentioned is... like last year, we're seeing phenomenal growth, phenomenal production with all the fruit bearing trees. Guys, you don't have to have so much out there that's available that you can just pick off where other people don't take care of their plants that you could easily do and peaches, applesauce, come on. And all the plants are loaded. So on the one hand, and by the way, we have a phenomenal winter wheat crop right now. I'm looking right out the window here at the south fields and we have probably one of the healthiest winter wheat crops I've seen in a long time. To the north, same thing. Springing up, good and healthy, very dense. Bambi couldn't even put a den in it, guys. We've got deer here to kill for, you know what I mean? Washtenaw County has some of the... And if you look, by the way, fine Ann Arbor, Michigan. When you find Ann Arbor, Michigan, way down there at the southeastern part of the state is where Washtenaw County is. That's what Ann Arbor, Michigan is in. And some of the biggest deer in the state of Michigan are taken in that county, right here where in fact all the area where I'm sitting right now, about 11 to 14 miles in radius, some of the biggest deer in the state have been taken and hold records that they've kept. So, whatever it is, radiation in the soil, just plain good food, combination, everything I think, because we've got a great farming community, of course part of it's been knocked out by the housing developments, but to the west and this area here, which is along the Huron River, we've got phenomenal deer populations. And the winter wheat has just taken off. It has had no effect by the nibbling and chewing, and we've had that every day for as long, quickly as the snow left, and it's just a fantastic season. So, if there is a food shortage, it is a plan. I'm going to say the same thing we said about Y2K. Y2K was a real threat. Y2K would only happen if they hit the switch. Because otherwise, we weren't going to panic and we were all better prepared than they are. Well, now this food shortage thing, the only possible way they're creating this is by manipulating the industrial farming communities because the private farmers are planting and cranking out everything because they know they can sell it. Guys, one way or another, here's the thing. And Larry, think about this. The biofuel issue is the other end of this. The farmers don't have to fear, well gee, what am I going to do with my corn? One way or another, if their corn were not perfectly up to snuff, if they didn't have it up to the level of dryness that they want, there is an industry that will easily turn and take every bushel of corn they produce, no matter what it's got. That's one of the things everybody forgets. You've got fungus, you've got different pesticide problems, which you've already talked about. We've got the genetically engineered stuff, which we don't want to eat. I don't think, Larry, we want our cows to eat it. You know what I mean? I don't think so. My understanding is mice don't even want to eat the crap, Mark. Yes, it's interesting. We've seen this with a lot of the different crops. Mice eat anything. Yeah, they're the garbage hounds. They take in and get rid of everything left laying around. Well, the interesting thing is, think about it. How can we get rid of it? How about throwing it into the presses and turning it into fuel and then dumping the rest for fertilizer? As far as once it's done, think about it guys. This is perfect. We have the opportunity to get rid of their genetically engineered garbage, focus on keeping the productive and of course non-copyrighted seeds that are out there so we can dump the garbage that they've tried to shove down our throats, and we get a benefit. We've got alternate fuel. Now the gas prices are going to continue to creep up. So, no matter what, we are going to need to have that alternate fuel in place. As Don pointed out, right now on several of the Hot Rod Magazine racks, you've got a couple different publications showing this new diesel that can run on any kind of bio oil. Corn oil, vegetable oil, French fry oil, it's already been used, doesn't make any difference. And it's doing 32 miles to the gallon on the highway, but it's also doing 9 points on the track. So, it's like, whoa, okay, we're talking performance and good gas mileage with a full-size SS Chevelle. So, what do you think it would do? I mean, again, it's got, one thing about diesels, they've got more torque and energy than they need. You really, as long as you, you know, you could actually throw more weight and you get the same performance. You don't see, you know, a progressive sliding scale up until you extreme, you know, put extreme loads on the system. So, you can have a heavier car and still get excellent gas mileage. You can have a full-size car. I've argued this years ago, there's no excuse for us having these popcorn fart vehicles that we're running around. In fact, with all the super light technology, we should actually have cars that are far more comfortable to drive in than aren't four-man coffins, where you're worried about how you turn and how you twist and you hit something no matter how you move. People do not know about highway comfort. We built the highway so that you would have the opportunity to use what was called a touring car. Your widget car was designed for bouncing back and forth in locally when you were around town. But when you get on the highway, a touring car, something where you can lay back, relax. We have vans. That's the closest thing we have to it. But Steven's station wagons, which they always tried to make a joke out of. In reality, it's because station wagons, in their original perceived configuration, guys, were going into what we call fleet highway cars. They were actually going to be like highway cruisers, where you could sit back. You have the same kind of seats like you have in a full-size van, only shorter. And it was comfortable to ride. It was like you were driving down, yes, your living room. Driving in your living room down the highway. Well, it's an expressway supposed to give you like a little bubble, a cube, that travels at a higher speed, expediting your travel to another location. So in the meantime, why not be comfortable and enjoy it? Kind of like a space shuttle. You get the drift? So, that's one of the things that we could be doing again, but we have to have the alternate fuels. And we've talked on this, but we're going to start it now because, again, the bad guys have already started the fuel creep, and they've done it without any fanfare or discussion at all. We've seen two significant jumps in two days. We're going to continue to see it on and off. They'll burst at sea without the response and burst it again. Part of this is to try and get their little gritty paws on more summer money and deplete the reserves for the fall as far as your reserves, your money goes. So we need to start thinking in terms of alternate ways to carve down. Bicycles, hey, those motorcycles, Larry, they need to be out on the road again. Well, one of the reasons fuel went down so much was people just quit traveling. It got so high they couldn't afford to go anywhere and they just stopped. I'm not sure if they really planned on that. In that respect, like you said, I don't think they were planning on it. I think the biggest problem with God is, for some reason these characters in the smoke-filled rooms are so isolated. that to a degree they understood part of what they were going to do, but their logic is that people would take the hit. Instead, it didn't happen. Everybody bit the bullet instead. They actually said, okay, I don't have to travel anywhere. Let me give you another example of money crunch. This is funny because two years ago, going on three years ago, I go to Boy Scout sales or the yard sales and it was, eww, those ha ha, there will always be these people with their little fingers up, eww, those, I didn't know anybody even had VHS machines anymore. Oh look, VHS tapes, eww. Now, last year, and the year before that, I could get cases of, or actually many cases, almost brand new movies on VHS, I mean as far as brand new condition, and I got them for free. I went to the end of the sale, nobody wants them, I said I'll just take them all. Just don't do anything with them, we'll carry them away. Well this year, and there's a cycle of this, so every six months we have these sales. Maybe this year I went to the sale and there were probably close to I would say seven, eight hundred VHS tapes. They were nice tapes and there was all kinds of really cool stuff I mean it really was and but it was stuff that you'd expect you know like Matrix and you know one and two whatever and you know all kinds of other stuff on VHS Well, you know Larry went at the end of that sale Most of the VHS tapes were gone and basically they fit into one box about the size of an egg box now That's the difference between this year I have a VHS machine and I can play that. I'm going to buy those after all and I'm going to take that and that and that and that. That's cheaper than going to the store and paying $7-8 or $10 or $15 or $29 for a new movie. I do that. I look at yard sales all the time. I collect video tapes. I've got over 1,000 video tapes. I've got a dog on a machine that cleans them. space is the only problem. There are a lot of good older movies out there that are worth seeing. Many of them that I haven't even seen first were. He could be things up for a dollar or less at Pfizer flea markets. It's an entertainment video system. I tell you what, people go, why would you want those? First of all, my point is this. Last year, somebody would say that. This year at these sales guys, nobody is saying a word. They're just grabbing the stuff and carrying it away. And that shows you attitude. That demonstrates that all of a sudden everybody's like, well, man, I can't afford anything new. But I don't want anybody to notice it. But I'm going to grab this and this and this and this. And at least it'll be more for my library. And I can watch this instead of going out and spending money at the store. That's really what people are doing. We've always done this. That's my point. If there was anything there, I'd have it be gone. If there's extra, it goes to some of our allies. I just boxed some up when I knew they were duplicates or in a certain category. They go to another one of our production facilities. That way, they have it for them to use or for the family to use because they've got a bunch of munchkins. The point is that they don't go to waste. But what was interesting is we're talking last year I had probably eight boxes, the size of an egg box, an egg crate, of VHS tapes and I would say two to three cases at least that size in cassette tapes. This year I would say, let's see, we got what, oh, a sliver of the VHS tapes and the cassette tapes Somebody came in and grabbed a whole bunch and they weren't just tossing them out. They just grabbed them and were picking them up and doing them. They wanted them. So we did pretty well in general. We got everything we wanted of what was left. But a lot of other people stepped in and picked them up instead. So this is one of the things we need to watch and we need to pay attention to because it happens constantly on a regular basis now and it's a demonstration of the overall economic situation. Other categories were the same way but we're interested in sound because we've got the production facilities. And remember if we have the tape and like you said there's a lot of stuff we've never seen that's been on VHS. There's a lot of stuff that we haven't seen on DVD, but a lot of stuff that is on VHS doesn't necessarily get to DVD. That's another mistake everybody's made over the years. They're all, why? I wish I had this movie. And then they're like, but I've never seen it on DVD. Oh, and by the way, you never will. It's just a little point there. It's good to have each of these different mediums on standby. Cassette tapes are the same way. There's a lot of music that is on cassette that was done in the 60s or the 70s or into the 80s, late 60s and 70s and 80s that in many cases you won't find anywhere else, just like reel to reel. Now this stuff we've got on reel to reel, you just simply can't replace. It's no longer in existence. It's long gone. It's been destroyed. It's not in the archives. And were it not for those reel to reel tapes to be used to transfer over to other medium, it would be gone from existence. It would no longer be in our historical archives or possible for anybody to even recollect, let alone here. So that's very important in itself. On that note, I want to take that tendril. There is a movie out there, I've mentioned several times. It is in the vein of a Doctor Strangelove kind of movie, only known as satire. However, it is touching on many real subjects and the movie is called The Second American Civil War with Beau Bridges and James Earl Jones. I don't know how many of you remember this. It was old enough. It came out originally on VHS. and then eventually was of course also on DVD and if you go, if you Google it you will find that you can get a VHS copy for as little as about $2.07 or $2.50 right around there plus shipping of course to as much as about $8 for a DVD copy and there are several or many copies in theory available but anyway VHS or DVD If you can, I don't want to ruin it for you, but James Earl Jones, this is a very well done movie, but it's touching on everything that you're seeing right now. There were some interesting points brought into this movie that of course, well, this is why they haven't really brought it back. It's not really out of date. Larry, you could plug this thing into Hollywood right now, like on television, and people would sit down and easily watch it. I would say it this way, it is timely with regard to its subject matter, but obviously the Second American Civil War gives a giveaway of what it's about. Just an overview, what is fascinating is the developments. First of all, let's go through the story line a little bit. Pakistan and India have a nuclear exchange. The US is already in economic dire straits, got all kinds of problems. LA has been taken over by the Mexicans and the blacks are fighting the guerrilla war against the Mexicans. Hey, what do you think about that? And meanwhile, of course, everybody is in each other's face about the whole thing about going after the weapons, state sovereignty, etc. And all of a sudden the federal government announces it's going to dump 20,000 or more Pakistani refugees slash casualties on one of the western states. Lo and behold, the state says we're not taking them. And so all of a sudden a feud goes up between the state and the El Presidente and it collides into a conflict. At a given point, many of the other states declare their state right issues and send their national guards to fight alongside the other state that is holding its ground. That's an abbreviation, but if you get a chance, guys, you want to check this out for $2 and some shipping, you've got a real interesting video to watch and you can share it with other people because, of course, once you have it, you can always make a copy. You know we're under the gun from some banksters and they had actually posted some things on their front door. The sheriff's department's come up and been probably going to come inside and take these people out. I haven't actually heard this program. Now it is looped, which our individuals across this country by these Zionist scumbag banks are now trying to pass talking about their... Right now again the, well I've heard something as I recall, we're not sure about the case, Ed's going to be checking into some of the other information. I to another bank's account. And now they're saying that, well, you may have been depositing that check for the last 2, 3, 5, 10, 12 years. Let's say you have a GM check, a retirement check, and it's being automatically deposited. If your bank is in another state from the issuing bank, they're now stating that they're going to have to wait seven days. to 10 days before they are going to release the resources that were transferred by that bank as cash capital. Isn't that fascinating? No, I'm a little confused here. We were all told that the reason we needed direct deposit, Larry, was so that we could take advantage of being able to get our money right away. Make transactions faster. Being faster and effective and efficient. You know what, if that's the case, you just dump the direct deposit and just give me the check and I'll go down to a book and get the money right away. You know what I mean? In other words, the bank can stick it. and the direct deposit. In fact, this is a good example of why all of you listening need to get rid of direct deposit immediately. This is why I'm listening to what I'm saying here because what's happened is exactly what we told you would happen years ago with this, oh, the cashless society. Well, what happens, and this is really critical here, what happens once you get this cashless society and strangers are handling all of your wealth, all of your traded time? What happens if all of a sudden they get a tood and they decide to tell you that well, we aren't going to give you your money right away? See if they're holding on to now that you got remember electronic transfer means that it's immediate guys There is a voucher sheet. Okay, I used to work in proof and computer Now there's a voucher printout that eventually is going to show up But otherwise imagine when you see this like these direct deposits. They do a cumulative account ID They figure out how many different things do we have coming from Schmidlatt Bank and Trust that's going to go to Barney Frank, you know, Pokemon the rear end institution. I'm sorry, savings and loan. Well, the Barney Frank savings and loan, Barney Frank, Pokemon the butt, savings and loan receives the money automatically. Okay? I mean, in the moment it took for Mark to go click, click, click after I got that tally sheet, I punched in a transfer code and $20 million, $50 million, $1 billion in FRNs in digits went over to Barney Frank, Pokemon the butt, savings and loan. Now from my place, it left immediately. I don't get to play with it anymore. If I'm the institution sending it, that money's gone. But on the other hand, now here's the thing, it was instantaneously transferred, like beam me up Scotty, over to the Barney Frank, Pokemon the butt, savings and loan. Now, as soon as they got it, they all of a sudden decided to tell you, oh I'm sorry guys, we're not sure that that money is really worth all of that. We're going to have to wait seven days until we can let you play with your money that we already had transferred. Oh, in the meantime that bank gets to play with your money. Remember, they've already got the savings system set up so that with the regular passbook you get screwed every step of the way with service fees. So they could actually steal. If you had like $50 or $100 in the bank, in three to six months they steal every penny out of it which in the past was considered fevery. Now, the scam artists, the banksters have plugged that in and of course have been using it on a regular basis. Well, does that mean that from now on we can start charging them interest for holding our money with an electronic transfer? Can we take them to court in small claims and charge that? We should and we could. In fact, there's no excuse they can come up with an electronic transfer for that to happen because it's not courier-transferred. Now, the courier eventually is going to come up with the voucher slash, or actually what it is, just simply a paper printout, or it could be a magnetic tape, could be digital card, whatever you want. But all it's going to do is be a verifier. That's what the validation system is doing. All it's going to do is come in and confirm, yep, on such and such a date, you know, over there at Barney Frank Pokemon about savings and loan, we received this set amount of dollars, and here's the confirmation. and thirteen cents and sure enough thirteen cents there it is you know forty billion six hundred fourteen thousand five hundred and sixty two dollars and thirteen cents and yet the numbers match congratulations at a boy and by the way this isn't happening once in a while on top of everything else you know the numbers both people realize this even in seventies numbers one proof machine was handling tens and tens of millions of dollars in an evening in a few hours, let alone, say the whole day, the process for the whole day with multiple operators. Oh, you're talking, you know, tens to hundreds of millions of dollars. Would checks anywhere from 20 cents to 50 cents? To, you know, money errors and checks in the seven and eight million dollar range, individual instruments. I know, I've handled them. You can't lie to somebody who has been in the mechanism and this demonstrates that the whole thing about your money would be safe with the electronic banking system. Imagine if we just had a cashless society. I'm going to change the perspective on that a little bit. How about do it this way? Yeah, imagine what it would be like with a cashless society. Yeah, you would starve. That's how it works. So anyway, pay attention and the policy should be pull the direct deposit nonsense as quick as you can. Again, like I said, first of all, you want to confirm you've got an area where you can place where you can cash the check and where you can do it where there's no phenomenal service fees or any nonsense like that. But that's purely up to you. The idea is to have the cash that much sooner in operation as opposed to the banks flim-flaming everybody and stealing it, say, for seven, eight days, nine days, ten days, and then fucking deciding it's there. That's the kicker on this whole thing. So, the other problem I have with that is, with regard to your check, the amount of currency, of fictional digit money floating around in the other world is so phenomenal, so astronomical, so big, it is inconceivable. Now, with that being the case, let me ask you something. Do you think that your $745 check, or your $435 check, or your $1,200 check, or your direct deposit social security check that's, you know, what, maybe $1,000 for the month at the most, plus or minus, and most of you it's a lot less. Do you think that that can't be covered in that instant when you demand your money? It's only digits. It's all... And trust me, the FRN printing presses, they're running a mile a minute, so there is the currency out there to back it up. And most of what a lot of you decided to do was that currency-less operation, that electronic money thing. So what are you moving? How the hell could it be possible not to have these digits? You forgot to mention, Martin, most people are living hand-to-mouth paycheck-to-paycheck. Yeah. And they've got a lot of these online banking things set up, automatic payments. delay seven days is kind of like playing Tetris. You know, the game is quicker and quicker and quicker. It's hopping. Fine, fine. Execute, execute, execute. Oh, wait a minute. No, that comes later. Anyway, that's my whole point behind this. And then watching, we've had this happen. They're announcing this. There's been some little blurbs in the local news about this. And I would expect to see National Pavlum Radio doing a smiley face thing here pretty soon to try and put a warm fuzzy on it. That's a warm fuzzy. That's exactly what they'll try to do. From of course a five year old's perspective, hi, this is National Pablum Radio talking down to you like you were a five year old, which is exactly what they do. Anyway, point being, watch your money. We're getting tighter and the loop is closing on this. First of all, guys, they weren't really planning on doing this until after they did plug in the Cashless Society. The very fact that they're having a problem with direct deposit checks, which are all electronic, is a perfect example of why we do not want a Cashless Society. They're trying to create all this confusion. Somebody goes, oh, look, if we just had everything on electronic, then you would steal more. And we would never get what we were supposed to get because again, do you think you're pitiful little check by comparison to their trillions and then now we're looking at quadrillions of dollars that somehow your digits couldn't be covered in any 24 hour period with all the numbers floating around? It's all BS. It's absolutely BS. That's all there is to it. And again, working from the bank end, guys, even in the days, this is what's sad. I worked back when the whole IBM 2000 mainframes with the magnetic tape. We used to do so many spools for the day, you know, all of them. What was it? Three in the first wave, two in the second, sometimes three if it was busy. Plus we'd do all the proof work for a particular bank. We bought American Bank and Trust. That was with Ann Arbor Bank and Trust. I'd make a run up to Lansing twice a night. We'd go up, run the tapes up there to cross reference our records to make sure we had backups in another location. We would take the tapes from that site, run them down to Ann Arbor, make copies of what we'd be doing, and then we'd run them down to Ann Arbor so we'd have backups for American Bank and Trust out of the Lansing branch, which is where I was driving to and from. and all the while we would do this guys purely it was the bookkeeping for the day and everything that they said they used to tell you then oh Larry it's going to take three or four days maybe five days for your check to clear most every check generated that was within the state at least was done within no more than say 16 hours of when you put it on paper. The only reason would be travel time. But it was already in the computer and of course later after that the high speed telephone lines and watt lines were available so there was no need to move the tapes anymore. Everything was done as we know and now it's so sophisticated it's ridiculous. In the time it takes me to say this, millions and billions and trillions of dollars in transfers have taken place in PIP electronics. Hold on, finished. And then the rest is all absolute pure rape profit where they're trying to tell you all about how, oh, the mysteries of banking, it's so complicated, it's so, oh, kiss my arse. That's the whole problem. We need to do away with most of what these witch doctors have gotten us into this problem because they're witch doctors. And it's one of the reasons we need to back out and dump them. One of the other examples, the very thing I was talking about, Larry, at the beginning of this hour, I'm looking at this winter wheat crop here, right? Guys, it used to be the bankers used to come and court the farmers when they used to manage themselves before the government, the bankers put pressure to have the Soviet type system plugged in, which was great for the bankers because they were taxing the snot out of the bankers and stealing from every direction. What they did is they flip-flopped it. In the past, the banker would have to beg for the farmers to bank with their bank. They'd have to make it profitable. But eventually they have turned it on their ears so that everybody and what few farmers are left have to come hat in hand to loan money before the season starts to buy the seed. Whereas in the past they were in the advanced cycle and all that they were doing is making sure that they could take their profits and operating capital and put it where it would be secure. And they always had the operating capital to take care of the next season and typically beyond that. Now, some of the reasons they did this is by attacking cash crops, which you hear the term, but nobody understands what that means. A cash crop is a crop that you could produce that was guaranteed would have high revenue return and it was almost absolutely impossible for you not to sell it. Example is tobacco. Oh, look what they did with tobacco, Larry. Yeah, they care about us a lot. Yeah, yeah. Well, not only that, but I'm just saying like tobacco in its traditional format, look at how it's been regulated. Look what they did with it. Now, another one is hemp, because hemp production, hemp is called weed, not because of the pot smokers we have nowadays, and that's a term that's been fabricated, but because hemp was a cash crop that was guaranteed no matter how poor your land, you could drop the heads on the ground, literally take the toppings off the crop, throw them on the ground if you were really lazy, and you were going to have hemp the next season, guaranteed, maybe not kind enough, sort of, You were going to have hemp and it would grow anywhere and it would also help to re-nutrient the soil, which was critical. But the important thing is it was a cash crop. It was guaranteed that every pound of hemp that you produced, that every chunk that you produced was going into the clothing industry, was going into the paper industry, one way or another it was absolutely guaranteed to be sold. Period. That is one of the many reasons that hemp was attacked the way that it was. The oil industry saw it as a competitor because they wanted to push plastics. They saw down the road where they wanted to go with it, but they had to attack what was a fundamentally organic, locally grown crop that allowed the farmers to stay out of the banks, which kept the land in the hands of the people. They are not the only two cash crops. There were several others that are actually out there that at one time, there were different seeds that were produced that were seed oil producers, much like what we see today that we are talking now again with the corn. But in the past, we had a number of different, and we still do, there actually are even a rake seed. There are a number of different types of production seeds out there that are purely produced for the benefit of producing certain types of oils. It is the oil that is the squeezing, so to speak, the cracking of the seed pods, the seeds that are used. It is not used to be eaten, it is not piled up and roasted, it is not chopped in a mulch and chewed on that way. Instead, we already have been producing for a long time, although some of these have faded into the background because the petroleum industry has stomped on them. and tried to negate them so that they wouldn't be competing against those privateers slash monopolists. This is one of the many things that was addressed by Ann Rand's Atlas Shrugged, but also in many, many other texts where they've discussed economics and have been honest about it, people. So, we're just seeing the later phase. Once they attack the farmers, and everybody thought, well that's okay, they're killing them. Well, wait a minute, now they're coming after my house. Well, you have a compressed version of what they did with the farmers, now with all these landowners, with all of these houses in the mortgage system. It's a compressed, shorter version, which is why it's happening the way that it is. and it was planned. They already tested the program out, took them longer, they got really frustrated with the farmers and the few farmers that are left, well, guys, they should have been supporting each other more effectively rather than showing up at other people's auctions to buy out what was left of their farm. If everybody had been standing together and stayed together, the sheriff wouldn't be doing any business and the banks wouldn't be taking any property. Now we see a variation on this in the exact same thing that's happening across the country with the homes. It's the same scenario. In fact, it's the very thing the Founding Fathers warned about. Didn't Franklin and Jefferson warn us about the idea of these charters getting into the county houses? Didn't they tell us what would happen, Larry? I think they were talking about people ending up on the front porches, so to speak. No, it wasn't the front porches. Maybe the front lawns? No, it wasn't the front lawns. How about being out on the street in front of the homes and off the land that their founding fathers or forefathers had cleared and made? Tent cities. Oh, and look what we have here. Now tent cities, well, they're hunting people there. Now we've got the next thing in place that everybody said we wouldn't see in the United States. Isn't that internal exile? And people in tent cities are disappearing, just totally disappearing. I think part of that is, again, what's happening is first of all, everybody came together in a tent city, then they're being run out. So people are just going on down the road. But yes, they could be disappearing, but as much as anything, they're dissipating. The biggest problem you've got is they're not staying in the area because they're being pushed out. This is stuff they used to do years ago. There are variations on this that were put in the celluloid. There's a very interesting niche of movie production that did a lot of in their color. They're not black and white. We're talking from the early 70s again, guys. From the, I'd say about 69 to about 1974-75. There's a window there where there were a bunch of unique movies done and they're not in rerun heaven. You won't find them in any of the movie channels even though they'll play in a bunch of the other stuff. Ad nauseam, repeat, repeat, repeat. But a lot of these movies were done by mainline actors. George C. Scott, Jimmy Stewart. And they cover the Depression period. Now, the reason they did this is to kind of rub it in and remind everybody because you see back in the 70s, great-grandma and grandpa were still around to tell you about what happened. Or in this case, like my parents, both of my mom and my dad were the oldest of eight. My mom was the oldest of eight on the shilling side. My dad was the oldest of eight on the quirky side. And the two of them watched the depression hit. They were the oldest, they were cognizant of what was going on, and they saw what happened. My grandfather, I used to sit down, that was one of the things, the whole history. I paid attention. I sat down and listened when they were talking, when the adults were talking. I sat off to the side on the end of the couch when I was little, down there on the floor, and just listened. Then, of course, politics comes up. And all the things we are seeing now are all the things that they saw then. But you couldn't fool Grandpa or Grandma or Great Grandpa or Great Grandma because they lived it. And so that's why they had to wait until this year 2008-2009 to try and plug in their BS again. Well, to challenge everybody, you want to see an image of what things were like, start seeking out some of these movies that were done in the 70s. One of them, George C. Scott, plays a rail boss, a rail shark on a freight train. The whole thing is how things really were with regard to dealing with people trying to jump a ride and how unpleasant it really was. There's a couple of others. Jimmy Stewart as an old gunfighter from the turn of the century. gets out and because he had been down for nine or thirty years, lo and behold he has this check he gets from the government because he was paid for every day he was in prison. If he had gotten out before the Depression it would not have been a big deal but because he comes out during the Depression he is a rich man. The whole gist of the movie is the fiasco that he goes through because the banker tries to cheat him right away and tries to steal all of his money. and the banker tries to say that he was robbing the bank when in reality the banker has already stolen all the money from the bank and he's trying to figure out how to cover his arse because people are investigating and trying to find out what's going on with the bank and so he does two things. He tries to steal Jimmy Stewart's money and he tries to blame him for bank robbery even though the guy is as old as the hills. So there's all kinds of stuff like that out there, but that's another reason it's not going to be in rerun heaven. You aren't going to see it on the 228 cable channels or the 575 satellite channels out there. Even though there's 24 hours a day times 500 channels, think about it. Last week we discussed in regards to the Dow Jones Industrial as being pumped up. They were on the buy, buy, buy. They managed to push the market up 400 and they ran the gold up and the silver up. Yesterday it fell on the Dow Jones 155 points. Today at noon it was down another 50 points. However, they got in there and they pumped it back. It lost 155 yesterday and it gained back 50 today. However, gold went down. Dow Jones closed today at 84.69.1. Gold went down to 923.20. However, crude oil, it didn't. It went up. It's now 59.32. Silver also climbed to $14.21. Other changes today on the market? Oh well, two weeks ago we were reporting General Motors at $1.89 and last week we were down to $1.59. Well today General Motors was down to $1.99 per share. Two weeks ago General Motors announced they were going to be cutting back more and that means closing of three plants here in New York that manufacture parts for GM. not sure how many thousands of people that's going to put out of place in this state. We already got very high unemployment. It's going to get worse. The other thing that was noticeable on the market Yesterday, all throughout New York, gasoline jumped 22 cents a gallon. We're now at the pumps today, and all three stations here locally, they all marked their pumps at $2.45 a gallon with the increase. Oh, isn't it a lovely world? Why are we going up in price and glass? Nobody's reusing more gasoline. They are just fleecing the market. They don't want people to travel during the summer. Who is going to afford it? $2.45. The other thing I was looking at, Larry was talking about these people in the foreclosure. We have the same situation in Detroit. Again, we are back to the foreclosures there that have been going on now for over two years. So the people will know the lady has been fighting on these foreclosures and given a mall start. On Monday she filed charges against four federal judges for tampering with evidence and falsifying records. And the judge would recuse herself on an original case that was way back in 2007. They re-opened the case while she was in a hospital. And because she didn't appear while she was in a hospital bed, they've issued a warrant for her arrest on charges stemming from criminal trespass on her own property while the place was in foreclosure. By a bunch of nonsense. In any case, they started with $5,000 bail, then went to $20,000, then went to $35,000, then jumped it to $100,000, then to $1,000,000. Well, a week ago they jumped it to a half a million dollars on her head now because she's now filed these charges against the federal judges. Well, this weekend bounty hunters were out looking for her and went around threatening her mother, daughter and other relatives wanting to know where her whereabouts and they wanted to search their homes and try to force their way in with no warrant just absolutely terrorizing members of her family. Not good. It's all over a lousy foreclosure and the foreclosure was illegal because the people who did the foreclosure never had a mortgage on the property to begin with. But that doesn't stop there. We've been helping a lady also in Minnesota. Same problem happened again yesterday as well. It's interesting as if this was sort of synchronized, Larry and Mark. What's going on? This lady was brought into court yesterday and ordered two weeks ago to go to trial. Well, three weeks ago, her lawyer quit. She has not been able to find counsel. She notified the court that she's not been able to notify counsel over a week ago. Well, the judge yesterday when she got in the court denied all of her petitions and motions and ordered her to go to trial. They have forced her into trial without counsel, without assistance and told her she is going to have to subpoena all of her own witnesses which had to be done this morning and proceed to question and interrogate and go to this trial. I have never heard of such a thing. Usually they try to force you to take an attorney. This time they forced this woman into trial and told her she had everything prepared by this morning. Have you ever heard of such nonsense of being forced into a trial? I'm looking at the summary of this foreclosure that's the eviction that's being looped on GCN and it says Don Welch had paid off her home and the mortgage company resold her mortgage. Then the police come to take the house. This was all done illegally and she was trying to serve on paperwork. These are just thieves folks. This is the same situation you have in Detroit. They actually had paid off a portion with the original mortgage holder and there was an agreement struck and then there was nothing done on the mortgage. Then a year or so later they started getting a bill from XYZ company who I've done an extensive search. All they are is nothing more than a storefront down in Lansing, I think it is. All I got is a store window. There is nobody there. There is no nothing. Their actual office claims to be a base office in New York City. I did a search here in New York City. Yes, they are incorporated here in New York. They are not incorporated in Michigan. Therefore, for a foreign corporation, they have no standing in a Michigan court to begin with. However, when I did a check here on the corporation's office in New York City, which they are supposedly incorporated, Again, it's nothing more than a storefront and there's nothing behind the curtain folks. All the owners and officers of the corporation, their offices and phone numbers are in California. What a scam! And who in the heck actually owns this corporation out in New York that's suing Nancy in Detroit makes no sense to begin with. They have no mortgage, they could not produce the fundamental instrument by which they claim to do a foreclose. The judge that recused himself from the case is now the one who issued the warrant for her arrest because she won't give up the property. It's ongoing scams. The lady in Wisconsin got the judge recused four weeks ago because he was conspiring with the opposing counsel. The judge within 48 hours of receiving the petition to recuse, he recused, no questions asked. I'm out of here. He knew that he'd been had. The new judge has just absolutely slammed this case to no end. I cannot believe how people are being trashed all over the country. Before we go any farther, I've been wanting to follow up on this. I think I have an email on it. Did you hear about the servicemen who came back? Child Protective Services, of course, was mucking with him once he returned. And lo and behold, he walked in and blew the judge right out of his boots. that was causing the problems? No, I hadn't heard that. I got three more emails last night from people around the country on foreclosures. One's in Washington, one I think is in Minnesota, and one is in Florida. The letters came off our website. People wanting to know what they can do to protect themselves on these illegal foreclosures. Well, the reason I point that out is you see, I can see that being a constant problem down there. with Jim Rants. Especially when the judge just finds people to do his problems. And apparently some soldier came back and decided to do this thing. Oh, the other thing too! We gotta let you go. We gotta let you go. There's always God's love to the Republic. Yes, Colonel, to the new world order. We shall prevail as the gentlemen of the Empire is on the run. We are the part of the school of night. And what did I hear down there by the Judge's chambers? It sounds like that soldier is back when I hear a quick break. And the sun will always shine on the old Liberty Tree, it's the tall
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