October 12, 2016
Morning Show
1h 0m
Complete
Radio Episode
2016
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed self-sufficiency, preparedness, and domestic manufacturing. He emphasized the importance of food storage, home production, and personal savings outside the banking system, citing examples of family-owned businesses like Meijer that operate debt-free. The show covered traditional skills including gardening, food preservation, animal husbandry, textile production, and clothing repair as essential survival knowledge. Koernke criticized the loss of American manufacturing capacity, particularly in textiles and fabric production, and advocated for restricting foreign ownership of U.S. property. He also touched on constitutional issues regarding standing armies and the Third Amendment.
- self-sufficiency
- preparedness
- food storage
- home production
- debt-free
- domestic manufacturing
- textile production
- animal husbandry
- wool
- gardening
- third amendment
- standing army
- foreign property ownership
- meijer
- supply chain
Transcript
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One of the things that we talk about food, they were not to talk about food. Right. You gotta have the soldier up and the people that back those that aren't in the fight. Often on their feet, keeping the medical supplies, food supply, go. Each individual, it is up to you to make sure that happens. Helping in your garden is necessary to make sure that these things happen. Well, any thing that you can do yourself, be self-sufficient. because you don't know what's going to be there tomorrow. Regular supply lines in. I've seen it. If a truck breaks down, you can have, you can go a day, you know, without delivery. The stores have gotten into where they don't, they've got their full supply, but if they're cut off from that central supply due to weather, power outages, you know, due to civil unrest, those shelves are going to be wiped out. within 24 hours, 24 to 48, no more. There are portions of one delivery a week. We're back to that again. But they're only getting one item to put on that slot on the shelf. I've seen this time and time again, even in the store where I work. And it's a big company, folks. These people deal with cash when it comes to building and purchasing. They don't use the banks anymore. They always mean they do have investments to take care of pensions, to take care of the medical. But beyond that, they've got, you know, they don't. And they're smart for doing that. They've been in business 70, ooh, 76, 77 years now. Or is it 78? Anyway. But they have amassed a fortune for the family. It is a family owned and family. It is not a public business. It's a family owned and operated. And let me tell you, those boys made it into what is it, the top income of the nation, three, two years ago. The Meyer boys, just after their dad passed, ran out of the banks. And that has been a family mantra since their dad built the store, some, or their grandpa built the store over there in Greenfield after the Depression. Oh my goodness, think about that during World War II. when they first came up with the idea for Meijer as a grocery store and then expanded it to a store where you could go in and get in. Once they started purchasing the land and building Grandpa Van out there and seeing what the banks did in 33, they had to be saving up enough cash to open that little store in that little community, the west side of the state, to expand from there. And they've made quite quite, they're very successful. I understand that. These guys, these boys fly around in their own private jet. They fly their employees to, you know, for training around the country and their private jet. And at time and time again, be aware. Aware, you know, there are entire companies that they don't deal with the banks. They deal with the bank's specific manners, basically, that they pay the employees to pay the taxes, but beyond that, they don't trust the bank. They don't. Or they wouldn't be due a business the way they are. Walmart, they don't pay interest. They deal with cash and cash. Something for you to think about. If you can afford to, debt free. But like I was talking about earlier this morning, set aside a portion of your paycheck for savings. Ever trust the bank into a bank or not? I don't know. Right now, if you can get money out and set it aside, If you can invest, of course, I don't know where things are at in the gold and silver market right now. But again, this is another bullet in your cartridge box. The self-sufficient is very important right now. If you're not there, get there. Get there as fast as you can. If it means working overtime, seeing productive home production. And when I say home production, I'm not just talking, I'm not talking just your gardening. Home production means being able to make something. It's useful and could be exchanged. Ladies, I mean, that means home canning, home cooking. If you have the ability to weave cloth, you know, oh my God, if you have an animal husbandry, if you can get wool, if you can make yarn, it's a long production, it's a survival. items to be turned around and you can take the gua wool and sell it to those that can do the carding. When I look at this goodness, that goes for like, uh, years to go. I don't know what the, what the price is on it now, but 32, when you consider the size of the animal and what you get off of them, that's money. I see this at 4-H shows where the kids that do that, part of their income, if they did not sell their animal. new one and put that money in the bank for whatever to take that wool, tear them down and sell these animals, sitting in the making of yarn. How to do that and that helps to do the course on the thing. I'm not sure what sheep's wool is going for right now. Live animal is priceless. It's such a good insulin. Even when wet it dries from the inside out against your body. So having these things, knowing how to do that, to take that yarn and again weave it It's an art and this is something that I think people misunderstand. When we talk about art, or refabrication, reuse of products, the fabrication, that whole process, our manufacturing, it truly is an art. And when you lose the ability to create that art, you're less as a nation. Isn't that part of it? They're not talking about arts and crafts and paintings. They're talking about And you know what? That's one of the first things to leave this nation. With our ability to make Texas, to make everything you see in the fabric store come from overseas. There is one company left in the US to a knit fabric, but even our cotton, a lot of our cotton is from overseas now. Even in that process of making t-shirt material, which we're seeing made into. I'm noticing the quality of the cotton. thinner, thinner thread. I mean it's risen. Oh my goodness, you can almost see through the material now. It's not the quality this country is used to make some ends. I think Lee still makes shirts here in the US and that's a good heavy... I mean that's what we have left. We don't have the looms that make like your curtain fabrics or make... I don't know, I don't know who does linen anymore. Make the plaques from the field and beat the stocks into spinables. Hymnth used to be done the same way. There's a couple places out in California that make hemp clothing. It's very extensive. The common practice here in the U.S. Did you know that the little trivia here, George Washington, when he gave his inaugural address, was in a plain U.S. exactly. anything else that went on your fabric? No, I haven't, one of the last times I actually saw a real... Fine Egyptian. Well that's kind of, that's not, linen is made from flax. I mean real linen and it's got a very, very pretty sheen to it. You can't find it. I have not seen a real linen anything on time. So finish on it, and I kind of think it has a fine sheen to it, not like a chimp. It's not, it still has a sheen to it. It's very impressive, you end with it. But this is an art that's lost. Again, self-sufficiency, seeing another bullet in that cartridge felt. These are things that the true art, as management based designation, aims on. This was the guy that signed it. She wanted something else to do, all kinds of things, your friends give me this you know what I mean? Yes and this is repurposing okay yeah of reuse so during depression I'm saying my mother will my mother and my my mother-in-law talk will will it's like yeah use it up. Well I can tell that they get the beholds and the heels over. It can be done. It can be done. Darning. The old darning season. Yep. I rebuild that especially if it's a big hole and rebuild it so they'll say you're not just you together because it's actually worn through and it's gone. So you're taking threads and basically little knots with threads. You can do it. It will wear a little longer but you're not going to get a whole lot of it and do it into strips and you can do this with clothing as well. It was typically done. I mean when they got holes in the knees you can patch it there and patch it here and you know when it got to the point where you're not patching this anymore, you're zipper, you're save those for something else and then take that fabric cutter and use it into quilt and from like quilt it together either make a blanket tablecloth there's you know repurposing what's left of those usable fabric that's there has been done for centuries. It's, you know, people don't think they're way more. Oh, we're gonna make a quilt. We're gonna go out and buy fabric. We're gonna do this and that and spend hundreds of dollars on making a quilt. That in the past, when you made a quilt, it's done. And you can, yeah, I mean, some of the old, look at the wedding ring circle, there's about three inches around, do circles and use the heavy and then make hand do outside edge, under and pull that tight, tough. flatten it out together and then attach that to a backing. And that, you know, that I was gonna do a blanket like that, because Mother-in-law would say, oh, I could do that. But each one of those took about 15 minutes to do. So I think I did that because it's a little tough. It was 24 inches square. But yeah, time was more than I was willing to invest in. That's fantastic art. If you have the pace, take a lot of time to projects that have a That was something that somebody else started working on that, injured, been all sitting up there other than that. Critistically fine, but when you're doing stuff for recovering furniture, that was something Needlepoint was to do that could be men's self-sufficiency, being able to do it yourself, together to make it pretty, functional, and something that would last. Remember, we want what we're doing to last, only for our generation, but it's enough. And that's something that was done. And it was done with natural fibers for the most part. It was done with wool. It was done, nowadays, with connoisseurs, you know, to, oh gosh, the blends. You know, if you can get the flax, if you can get, these are items that are kind of black, generations can be passed on as family heirlooms. This is, we're talking functionality and will help you get through. to get into the mindset of producing a guest to do that. So if you see things laying about that are going cheaply here in Dexter, there's a group, they collect the wool in the area and they set the yarn every year. This is something, it's there. If you look around, you will find artisans in your area that are doing that and if you want to learn that process, it's something that you can do for yourself and your family. But again, because things break down, this is going to be a place to go. You'll be the go-to person because, gee, where are we going to get our yarn? Because right now, we're depending on China and Thailand and Vietnam to produce those new ridiculous. We should be producing our own. We need production. We need the manufacturing that we've had. We've had the Democrats, these major companies out of the US. They've gone overseas, we no longer have the tariff paid here. That's what they were all about. The other thing I see that needs to change in this country majorly is that foreign interests be able to come here and purchase property. If they want to come here and purchase property, they'd better emigrate here. If they want to emigrate into this country and set up a major operation plan. but they must leave their old country behind and come through naturalization rights. We need to own this country in order to remain. Sounds like we're at the body hour boat. Now you can feel that squeaky clean sensation like none other with Vitamer toothpaste and mouthwash. Vitamer toothpaste and mouthwash is a unique natural formula not found in any other oral care products. With a gentle combination of zinc, folic acid, myrrh and clove oil, Vitamer effectively whitens teeth, removes plaque and freshens breath and it does it naturally without any harmful chemicals. Visit us online at vitamer.com. That's V-I-T-A-M-Y-R dot com. Or call us today to place your order at 1-888-558-8482. That's 1-888-558-8482. Keep your teeth and gums healthy with Vitamer toothpaste and mouthwash. Vitamer. Nature's answer to healthy teeth and gums. And remember, It's all completely natural, available at participating health food stores nationwide. StrikeHardGear.com The time is now. As the walls are closing in on America, Republic Magazine is a beacon of light guiding those that fight for freedom and the restoration of America. Republic Magazine is the ultimate activist tool. Republic Magazine digs in deep to expose the lies and offers real solutions from the experts. No other publication in America offers the real news like Republic Magazine. Get copies to give to friends, family and neighbors. or simply order a subscription for yourself at republicmagazine.tv Get informed and stay informed with Republic Magazine, the ultimate resource for your fight against the New World Order. Claim your free digital copy now or order a print subscription online at www.republicmagazine.tv That's republicmagazine.tv or call them toll free at 800-873-1620 That's 1-800-873-1620. 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Hundreds of university and government level tests have been done and the 50th clinical trial has been completed. What is the FDA hiding from you? Find out at www.ihsite.com or call Gla- at 800-974-1879 to place an order. Check yours. Don't you keep looking around. The guy who's walking across the field looking three feet up in front at the calf and looking at his feet and looking four feet in front. We tell you, keep looking around. This is so base. This is almost doesn't need to be a jacket points in his neck because over here and he's looking over there and he's trying to look different ways at three different times. Not to be cold. Here's the example of I need some more. We could use that. Exphrasing them. I'm talking you see some of the film down the hill and and that's an art. You see the film too. Many times their overcoats were taken too. Man's soldier walking away with what appeared to be cardboard freezing off of it. These things are recorded into history. You can see them for your seven hundred years. The sun sucks about. The deeper you get into enemy territory, the harder it will be to sustain. But the harder your enemies are, the more and more isolated. You know, you do something, don't they? Come over here. Let's put them over there. Didn't you recognize that? We gotta put them, let's put them in the people's houses. One of the amendments, it sure is. standing army. The Founding Fathers knew that. I'd like to run into the Founding Fathers. Nancy, you've seen one or more of the Purge movies, haven't you? The Purge movies are, uh, murder or anything. And they built these two movies. Don't listen. It's a wonderful way out for the gods to decide to try to kill when they're not protected during me's think. They could have run that line from Hillary at the end of the movie. Sometimes I think that there's one for everybody else and one for me. Now we've addressed that before. Even that statement there Tommy out there that's changing his mind. He's going somebody getting rich in America or China I don't have a problem. You know, we talked about targets many times. How did you get those can get you we've talked about in the contract? They got sky and it works special maybe six and a cliche to knock her because they were making $25 an hour just for making cars Remember that you you you have the ability to if you're really strength, you know your son and your daughter the best you could do that Well, if you're making twice that that's $30 an hour $25.25 an hour in 1973. The money won there, honey, is becoming... I don't remember what bullet a spear. But many years ago, a new bullet, and he was hearing good things about it, and he bought that bullet and anything else he'd ever shot in that. And he bought pallets of them, and he'd go to cons for ways like that. Look at what... You'd be hard-pressed to why to pay, lose money because of the value of the money you paid $800, probably get it for. It's been in the crook of that tree and somebody tried to tune the gun. What would that be? How about, let's go back to that fab, how about a thread and a needle? Dinky little things that make up our life. Think about it. Another thing that would have the fabric and do that, you can fold it. It'll really help you and you hold the, I try to push that needle through there and the needle's three quarters of an inch in here from doing things like you might need to help. I talked about it a couple of years ago. I suppose everything came away in the bottom. repairing things. We talk about trying to keep things in the field, an example, but you know, that strap gap and your bunch of things out there that might come in really, really handy in the not too fancy IOT. The micro effect is on screen and thermal. Hey, goals and binoculars, good donations, kind of way to get things done there. We're getting really close to the top of the hour on today the 12th. I do believe we've got Joe Crocek. Hey, Paul, Kio-wee. Paul, my number's two. Hear the music any second now. Listen to the micro effect, how about any second we're at the top of the hour during that