"financial crisis 2008"
14 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis and its impact on Americans who invested in the stock market, contrasting those losses with the preparedness philosophy of the Patriot movement. He criticized banks and the financial system for predatory practices, advocated for diversification into tangible assets like precious metals and supplies, and recounted personal experiences with banking fees and fraud. Koernke also detailed the history of the Phil Donahue militia interview from the 1990s, explaining how the network initially canceled the episode because it portrayed militia members positively, and how listener pressure forced its reinstatement. He discussed media manipulation tactics including audio editing and paid shills, and promoted the "Send a Rope" campaign encouraging citizens to mail rope pieces to politicians deemed treasonous.
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Mark Koernke and Mike Nasser discussed the 2008 financial crisis, comparing it to historical economic agreements from 1997 involving WTO banking deregulation and Korean bailouts. Caller Dave, a PBN reporter, reported on illegal foreclosures, voter registration purges targeting poor and foreclosed homeowners, and prison bond trading schemes. The hosts advocated for community takeover strategies, stock accumulation tactics to seize corporate control, and grassroots information distribution via YouTube and social media to counter what they characterized as systemic corruption and prepare for potential civil conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis and its devastating impact on ordinary Americans, particularly a woman who lost her entire 27-year savings in the stock market collapse. He criticized the banking system's predatory practices, the Federal Reserve, and the systematic destruction of American wealth through what he characterized as a communist takeover of financial institutions. Koernke emphasized the importance of diversification, food storage, and withdrawing money from banks in small bills and coins. He also addressed gun rights issues in Orange County, California, where concealed weapons permits were being revoked, and promoted an upcoming 9-11 Truth event featuring architect Richard Gage.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis, blaming both Republicans and Democrats for creating economic collapse through coordinated policy. He explained the 'straw man' legal fiction system used to enslave citizens through bond debt, warned of government plans to disarm the National Guard, criticized both presidential candidates (Obama and McCain) as tools of globalist elites like Rockefeller, and urged listeners to prepare for conflict by stockpiling ammunition, medical supplies, and spare rifle parts. He promoted his 'Send a Rope' campaign to demoralize treasonous politicians and detailed his military experience with POW instructors and Colin Powell's early career placement.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed the October 2008 financial crisis, analyzing stock market volatility, the government's bank bailout program, and the collapse of commodity speculation. They examined the disconnect between paper assets and physical precious metals, urging listeners to purchase physical silver and gold rather than speculative futures. The show covered Iceland's financial collapse and Russian intervention, the broader global economic meltdown affecting multiple nations, and criticized federal mismanagement of the military in Iraq and Afghanistan. Caller Sir David Andrew provided detailed market analysis including gold and silver prices, international stock market declines, and warnings from economists about systematic financial meltdown.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Donald Betcher discussed the financial crisis of October 2008, including the stock market collapse (Dow down 678 points, NASDAQ down 95 points), the Federal Reserve's emergency bailout legislation, and currency devaluation. Caller Dave from New York provided detailed market analysis, noting that Russia, Ukraine, and Indonesia had closed their stock markets, while gold climbed to $914.70 and silver rose to $12.04. The hosts examined the redesigned Federal Reserve notes, highlighting the removal of regional bank identifiers on new currency denominations. Subsequent callers addressed mortgage payment delays, computer security breaches, and ammunition reloading techniques using saboted .22 caliber rounds in .30 caliber rifles.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis, criticizing the Federal Reserve's 1913 establishment and the resulting economic collapse. He addressed currency devaluation, the need for preparedness with food, water, ammunition, and tools, and rejected the proposed cashless society and microchip implants. The show featured calls about militia training exercises (FTX) in East Texas and emphasized community self-sufficiency, local production, and spiritual resistance to what Koernke characterized as globalist control. Guests included Mike Nasser, Jeff Hill, and John Ridgeway, who discussed preparedness, the Minuteman Tank Project, and the importance of armed self-defense.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis as a planned event rather than an accident, comparing it to a long stretch of road leading inevitably to disaster. He explained the government's $700 billion bailout and its implications, including the straw man bond system and how citizens are being positioned as collateral and indentured property. The show featured extensive discussion of preparedness, including recommendations for bulk food purchasing at Aldi's and feed stores, ammunition and firearms suppliers (Center Fire Systems, Amoman, JND Components/Sabo accelerators), and upcoming events at Knob Creek gun range. Butter Knife provided detailed information on discount grocery chains and local food wholesalers as part of a quartermaster data collection project.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis and the $700 billion bailout, arguing it represented the culmination of a decades-long system of financial enslavement through birth certificates, Social Security numbers, and fictional bond instruments. He explained how the U.S. government creates bonds on citizens at birth worth millions of dollars each, which are then traded on international markets by banks like Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers. Koernke connected this to the expansion of the prison system, describing penal bonds as a new form of slavery, and warned that the government would use force to seize property and round up citizens to service the debt. He urged listeners to understand the constitutional versus corporate structure of government and to reclaim their bonds through administrative filings with the Secretary of the Treasury.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis as a deliberate orchestration by globalist bankers rather than an accident, criticizing mainstream media for complicity in covering up the truth. He emphasized the importance of militia preparedness and the Hautari field training exercise scheduled for September 27-28, urging listeners to accelerate food, water, and ammunition stockpiling. Koernke addressed the need for Americans to recognize themselves as patriots first, not globalists, and called for the arrest of bankers responsible for the economic collapse. He also discussed the importance of grassroots information distribution, the infiltration of foreign military personnel into the United States, and the need for armed resistance against what he characterized as a planned global takeover.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Don discussed the 2008 financial crisis, criticizing the government's trillion-dollar bank bailouts while ordinary Americans faced foreclosure. They highlighted how the fractional banking system and Federal Reserve created unsustainable debt, contrasting it with President Kennedy's 1963 United States Notes initiative, which would have bypassed the Federal Reserve. The show covered preparedness, Second Amendment rights, militia training, and warnings about UN vehicle sightings and potential government overreach. Koernke emphasized individual responsibility for armed preparedness and criticized the NRA for compromising on gun rights, while urging military personnel and their families to resist unconstitutional orders.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis, focusing on the collapse of major banks including Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch. He warned listeners about the dangers of holding stocks electronically rather than in physical form, advocated for owning tangible assets like precious metals and ammunition, and explained how the banking system uses fictional debt to control the population through straw man bonds. The show also covered checkpoint avoidance techniques, the importance of developing domestic manufacturing and skilled trades to rebuild American infrastructure, comparisons between the U.S. Constitution and the imposed Iraqi Constitution, and reconnaissance observation methods for citizens.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis using a Titanic metaphor, advising listeners holding stocks in failing banks to demand physical share certificates rather than selling at depressed prices, predicting a two-year recovery cycle for laundered money. He addressed the educational-industrial complex with caller Karen from Maryland, explaining how corporations like General Motors pressured the University of Michigan to prioritize foreign students over qualified American applicants, and discussed how higher education screens and channels student thought through institutional gatekeeping. Caller George from Florida reported a case of Child Protective Services entering a home without a warrant and seizing a baby, prompting discussion of government overreach and resources for legal defense. The show concluded with commentary on media bias in presidential election coverage and comparisons between Democratic and Republican approaches to governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis, drawing parallels to the 1929 stock market crash and explaining how banking manipulations through confidence schemes and Ponzi-like operations led to the current economic collapse. He interviewed callers Dave and Ken about a Michigan case involving fraudulent foreclosures, illegal arrests, and property seizures by local officials and law enforcement, highlighting systemic corruption in state courts. The show also covered pro se litigation tactics, judicial misconduct against self-represented litigants, and a caller's concerns about the Large Hadron Collider experiment in Geneva.